Fort Conde Museum
About the Museum:
Originally founded in 1702 at 27-Mile Bluff up
river, Mobile was relocated in 1711 to the current site where a
temporary wooden stockade fort was constructed to protect the town. It
was named Fort Louis after the old fort up river. In 1723, construction
of a new brick fort with a stone foundation began. Renamed Fort Condé
in honor of King Louis XIV’s brother.
Fort Condé protected Mobile and its citizens for nearly 100 years from
1723-1820. It was built by the French as a defense against British and
Spanish attack on the strategic location of Mobile and its Bay, the
eastern most part of the Louisiana colony. The military importance of
Mobile and Fort Condé was huge. The fort and town protected access into
the strategic lands between the Mississippi River and the Atlantic
colonies along the Alabama and Tombigbee Rivers.
Fort Condé and its surrounding features covered about 11 acres of land.
It was built of local brick, stone, earthen dirt walls, and cedar wood.
Twenty black slaves and five white workmen did initial work on the
fort. If the full size fort were present today, it would take up large
sections of Church, Royal, Government, St. Emanuel, and Theatre Streets
in downtown Mobile.
From 1763 to 1780, England was in possession of Mobile and the fort was
renamed Fort Charlotte in honor of King George III’s wife. From 1780
to1813, Spain ruled Mobile and the fort was renamed Fort Carlota. In
1813, Mobile was occupied by United States troops and the fort again
named Fort Charlotte.
In 1820, Congress authorized the sale and removal of the fort since it
was no longer needed for defense. City funds paid for the demolition to
make way for new streets and construction built towards the river and
southward. By late 1823, most above ground traces of Mobile’s fort were
gone.
The current Fort Condé, about 1/3 of the original fort recreated in
4/5-scale, opened on July 4, 1976 as part of Mobile’s United States
bicentennial celebration.

