Dauphin Island

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Dauphin Island is a barrier island on the western edge of Mobile Bay.

Dauphin Island is a barrier island lying just off the Alabama coast in the Gulf of Mexico. The island's eastern end helps to define the mouth of Mobile Bay. The eastern, wider portion of the island is shaded by thick stands of pine trees, but the narrow, western part of the island features scrub growth and few trees.

Dauphin Island, Alabama is the name of the incorporated community situated on the island. The island has a permanent population of about 1,200. It is home to a marine sciences laboratory, The Estuarium, and numerous private homes. Beaches attract some tourism, and fishing is a popular activity in the waters around the island.

It was named after Louis XIV's great-grandson and heir, the Dauphin.

Although the island has several bird sanctuaries, the main one is the 164 acre (664,000 m²) Audubon Bird Sanctuary. Dauphin Island is the first landfall encountered by many birds as they migrate north from South America, and as a consequence many species can be found resting there before continuing their journey.

History

Serpentine shell middens, perhaps 1500 years old, attest to at least seasonal occupation by the Native American Mound Builder culture. Shell Mound Park, along the Island's northern shore, is administered by Alabama Marine Resources Division.

In 1519, the Spanish explorer Alonzo Pineda was the first documented European to visit, staying long enough to map the island with remarkable accuracy.

The island's French history began on January 31, 1699, when the explorer Pierre Le Moyne, sieur d'Iberville, virtually the founder of French Louisiana, arrived at Mobile Bay, and anchored near the island on his way to explore the mouth of the Mississippi River.

The first permanent settlement on the island, called "Massacre Isle" for heaps of skulls that had been found there, was a trading depot, unloading goods from Santo Domingo and France, and collecting furs in a short-lived fur trade. Mobile Bay itself, before it was dredged, was too shallow, and its sand bars too shifting and treacherous, for ocean-going vessels.

Dauphin Island was captured by the British in 1766 during the Seven Years War, but retaken by the Spanish in 1780 during the American Revolutionary War. During the War of 1812, American forces captured the island (1813) to prevent British forces from using it.

Fort Gaines on the eastern tip of the island was built between 1821 and 1848. It was occupied by Confederate forces in 1861, and captured by Federal troops during the Battle of Mobile Bay. The phrase, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead," was spoken by U. S. Admiral David Farragut just a few hundred yards from Dauphin Island's shore.

The first Sand Island Lighthouse, authorized in 1834, was replaced by a structure 150 feet high, at a cost of $35,000, that was dynamited by Confederate forces. The present lighthouse (1873; in use until 1970), now belongs to the Department of Interior and has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Hurricanes

A bridge connecting the island to the mainland across Dauphin Island Sound was built in the 1950s; it was destroyed by Hurricane Frederic on September 12, 1979; the community got $32 million to rebuild the bridge, in spite of warnings from the Federal Emergency Management Agency that it would encourage development. The prediction was accurate: an island that suffered $7 million in property damage due to Frederic was host to over a quarter billion dollars in property by 2000.

Since 2000, the barrier island has been struck by five hurricanes and has received millions more in federal disaster aid. Even the relatively weak Hurricane Georges destroyed 41 houses on the island; with help from the federal government, almost all their owners rebuilt.

Hurricane Ivan, the latest to affect Dauphin Island, caused most of the island to be covered with approximately two feet of water.

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