06/06/2026
⚓ Stand at the tip of Fort Morgan peninsula and you're standing at one of the most historically loaded pieces of ground in the entire American South. To your left, the Gulf of Mexico. To your right, Mobile Bay. And behind you, nearly two centuries of war, weather, and memory built into every brick.
Fort Morgan has guarded the mouth of Mobile Bay since 1834. It held through the Civil War, through the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864 when Admiral Farragut gave his famous order, through two World Wars, through hurricanes that reshaped the coastline around it. The walls are original masonry. The cannons are still there. And on a quiet weekday morning in the off-season, you can walk those grounds almost completely alone — which is exactly how a place like that deserves to be experienced.
Have you ever visited Fort Morgan — or grown up knowing it as just part of the landscape out there at the end of the road? Drop a comment and tell us your connection to it. And follow Alabama Gulf Life for more deep dives into the history and hidden culture of this coast. 🌊🏰