Mobile County Alabama – Digital Alabama https://digitalalabama.com Alabama Cities, Counties, Folklore, History, Maps, Stories and Travel Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:50:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2019/02/alabama-coat-of-arms-60x60.jpg Mobile County Alabama – Digital Alabama https://digitalalabama.com 32 32 Map: Mobile County Alabama Historical Locations /alabama-maps/mobile-county-alabama-historical-locations/21620 Wed, 06 Feb 2019 19:02:49 +0000 /?p=21620 Mobile County Alabama Historical Locations

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Mobile County Alabama Historical Locations



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Big Creek Lake /alabama-counties/mobile-county-alabama/big-creek-lake-semmes-al-mobile-county-alabama/243 Tue, 23 Oct 2018 01:50:01 +0000 /?p=243 Big Creek Lake Semmes AL Mobile County Alabama     Big Creek Lake (or Converse Reservoir) is a municipal reservoir which serves as the main source of drinking water for the city of Mobile, Alabama and its suburbs.[1] It was formed by the damming of Big Creek, a tributary of the Escatawpa River in southwest Alabama. The reservoir was the subject of controversy in the 1980s over freshwater […]

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Big Creek Lake

Semmes AL

Mobile County Alabama

 

 

Big Creek Lake (or Converse Reservoir) is a municipal reservoir which serves as the main source of drinking water for the city of Mobile, Alabama and its suburbs.[1] It was formed by the damming of Big Creek, a tributary of the Escatawpa River in southwest Alabama. The reservoir was the subject of controversy in the 1980s over freshwater rights between Alabama andMississippi.[2]

 

During the period from 1907 to 1940, the city of Mobile kept pace with providing water service for the population growth until the outbreak of World War II when it became increasingly apparent that the existing sources of supply were inadequate and undependable. A new source was necessary not only because of lack of sufficient quantity, but because the water sheds of Clear and Three Mile Creeks were becoming more urbanized and the quality of the supply was endangered. The source of supply recommended by the Mobile Water Works to the City and Planning Commissions was Big Creek, in the western part of Mobile County. The Big Creek project was placed in service in 1952 at a cost of about $7,000,000 including land, dams, pumphouse, reservoir and pipelines. Construction required two years.[3]

The Big Creek impoundment was named J. B. Converse Reservoir in 1987, but is commonly referred to as “Big Creek Lake”. The pumping station was named S. Palmer Gaillard Pumping Station.[3]

Water is delivered from the 3,600-acre (15 km2) lake and pumping station by pipes to two reservoirs where it is diverted either to domestic or industrial use. The reservoirs are at an elevation of 220 ft (67 m) and industrial water is delivered by gravity to industry at an elevation of about 25 ft (8 m). The industrial water line extends from the filter plant northward about 7 mi (11 km) to the industrial sites at Magazine Point. Pumps at Big Creek Lake provide treated water to Mobile and untreated water to local industries such as chemical plants and paper mills.[3]

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Beaver Mills Alabama /alabama-ghost-towns/beaver-mills-alabama/2921 Tue, 23 Oct 2018 00:42:08 +0000 /?p=2921 Beaver Mills, also known as Beaver Meadow, is a ghost town in Mobile County, Alabama.

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Beaver Mills Alabama, also known as Beaver Meadow, is a ghost town in Mobile County, Alabama, United States, near U.S. Route 45, south of Citronelle, Alabama. It was the site of a paper mill that was also used as a uniform depot during the American Civil War.

 

Beaver Mills Alabama Area from Google Earth

Beaver Mills Alabama Area from Google Earth

After the Civil War ended, the old uniforms were then converted into the making of bonded paper. The mill still stands today. There are tall stone walls in the area, and buttons from uniforms can be found in the town. The woods have taken over most of the area, and no buildings remain. Only the skeleton of the mill survive. Beaver Mills is on private property, and requires permission to enter. The bridges have since been removed to prevent anyone from intruding.

 

MORE MOBILE COUNTY ARTICLES

Alabama Ghost Towns Index

Alabama Cities Index

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