THE LAY OF THE LAND - The Center for Land Use Interpretation Newsletter

INDEX

Vacation: Dauphin Island

The CLUI LIC Program

CLUI Kiosk On View In NYC

The Henry Ford Experience

Dixie Mall R.I.P

The Landscape Of Corn

Ground Zero Los Angeles

A Visit To The Getty Villa

City Insight: St. Louis

Cementland

Report From New Orleans

FEMA Trailers

Life On The Line At Derby Line, VT

State In Focus: Alabama

Book Reviews

Newsletter Acknowledgements

 

Maybe we will finally be able to see the forest when we cut down all the trees.
-Confucius, attributed

 

Vacation: Dauphin Island
On Display at CLUI Los Angeles

House on Dauphin Island.
CLUI photo

An exhibit about Dauphin Island was on display at the Center for Land Use Interpretation’s Los Angeles exhibit hall this winter, as part of the Center’s Coastal Islands: Fragments of America program. The exhibit, titled Vacation: Dauphin Island, looked at the community there as a representative extreme of the architecture that has immerged in the hurricane and flood-prone Gulf coast.


Another house on Dauphin Island.
CLUI photo

Naturally, Dauphin Island is a dynamic, migrating sand bar, a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Alabama. French settlers first named it “Isle Massacre,” as it was littered with skeletons when they found it. Over the years this marginal land was claimed by France, Spain, England, and the Confederate nation. At the island’s more solid eastern tip is Fort Gaines, guarding the mouth of Mobile Bay, into which Admiral Farragut charged in the American Civil War, famously uttering “Damn the torpedoes - Full speed ahead!” Following the Civil War, the island slowly became a community of leisure, with a summertime population more than five times larger than the year round population.

Dauphin Island’s remaining battle is with the ocean, whose hurricane winds and surging surf threaten to wipe its western half clean. The island was ransacked by hurricanes Frederick in 1979, Danny in 1997, George in 1998, and Ivan in 2004. Rebuilt homes, funded by FEMA- backed insurance policies, grow back on higher and higher stilts, floating like domestic hovercraft above the crashing waters. The latest round of storms, 2005’s Dennis, Katrina, and Wilma, erased dozens of houses off the island, and left many of the surviving, damaged homes teetering, in limbo in a no-man’s land. Dauphin Island, it seems, is another one of those places determined to go away.


 

More houses on Dauphin Island.
CLUI photo

Addendum:

External link - Wikipedia article on the history of Isle Massacre
External link - More about the discovery of the skulls which were actually from a burial mound torn open by a hurricane and not the result of a massacre.

 

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