Mobile Wharf
Mobile Wharf, 1895 — Mobile, Alabama
In this photograph from 1895, workers load large bales of cotton onto a steamboat at a busy wharf in Mobile, Alabama. During the late 19th century, Mobile was one of the most important cotton ports in the United States, serving as a key gateway between the agricultural South and global markets.
After the American Civil War, the port of Mobile rapidly regained its importance. Cotton grown across Alabama, Mississippi, and parts of Georgia was transported by riverboats and railroads to the city, where it was compressed into large bales and shipped to textile mills in Europe and the northern United States. The bustling waterfront, filled with steamboats, warehouses, and dockworkers, became the economic heart of the city.
Scenes like this capture the intense daily activity that powered the Southern economy in the late 19th century—long before modern container ports transformed maritime trade.
📸 Courtesy of the University of South Alabama Archives, T. E. Amistead Collection
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Contributed by
JOSE M LOPEZ
March 14, 2026
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