Fire Department Headquarters 



(station #5) (1) 



1859; two-story masonry structure first 



housed Mobile's volunteer fire companies. 



First Baptist Church (1) 



First National Bank of Mobile (1) 



Fort Conde-Charlotte (1) 



1711; French fort was reconstructed 



by the City of Mobile. 



Fort Conde-Charlotte House (Kirkbride 

 House) (1) 



1822; Federal -Greek Revival; residence 

 built on site of French fort; now a 

 house museum, headquarters of the Na- 

 tional Society of Colonial Dames of 

 Alabama. 



Fort Gaines (3) 



1818; five-sided brick fort was one of 

 two forts guarding the entrance of 

 Mobile Bay; not completed until the 

 Civil War; open to the public. 



Fort Louis de la Louisiane (4) 



1702; location of the capitol of French 



Louisiana, 1702-1711. 



Gates-Davis House (1) 



1842; Creole plantation cottage; best 



example of this uncommon style in Mobile. 



Georgia Cottage (1 ) 



1845; Greek Revival with Creole influ- 

 ences; was the home of Augusta Evans 

 Wilson, Southern novelist popular during 

 the last half of the 19th century. 



Greene-Marston House (1) 

 1851; Eclectic; stagecoach stop; com- 

 plexity of frame structure unequaled 

 in Mobile. 



Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Passenger 

 Terminal (1) 



1907; Spanish Colonial Revival; massive 

 and ornate structure; one of two remain- 

 ing large-scale railroad stations in the 

 state; now used for offices and storage. 



7 North Lawrence Street, Mobile 



806 Government Street, Mobile 

 68 Saint Francis Street, Mobile 

 104 Theatre Street, Mobile 



104 Theatre Street, Mobile 



East end of Dauphin Island 



Near Twenty-Seven Mile Bluff 

 on the Mobile River 



1570 Dauphin Street, Mobile 



2564 Spring Hill Avenue, Mobile 



2000 Dauphin Street, Mobile 



Beauregard and Saint Joseph Street, 

 Mobile 



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