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an hour ago
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Fort Gaines commemorates 161st Battle of Mobile Bay anniversary
DAUPHIN ISLAND, Ala. (WKRG) — A piece of Civil War history was brought back to life on Dauphin Island Saturday as Fort Gaines marked its 161st Battle of Mobile Bay Commemorative Day. For more than 180 years, Fort Gaines has stood watch over Mobile Bay. The annual event invites visitors to step back in time with the echo of cannon fire and the sights of reenactors dressed in uniform, honoring those who fought in one of the pivotal naval battles of the Civil War. 'I had an ancestor who fought, part of the war between the states was here, and he was in the 21st Alabama Company I,' reenactor Bruce Pate said. It's a long-standing tradition on Dauphin Island that gives people the chance to walk in the footsteps of those who came before them. While the history of the Civil War is complicated in American history, Pate said he hopes visitors take away an important message. 'We don't want another war. I don't want that. So, if we learn from our past, we're less likely to do it again,' Pate said. Visitors traveled from across the country to witness the reenactments and explore the historic battlegrounds. Among them were Anna and Zachary Harpel, who drove with their family from Ashland, Kentucky. They shared with News 5 what they took away from being at Fort Gaines. 'The letters that they wrote because some of them were just talking about daily lives,' Zachary Harpel said. 'But then other ones were informing mothers and fathers that their sons had died here.' 'The cannon, it just made me realize, like, how real the war was is,' Anna Harpel said. 'It was just eye opening and just made me realize that these soldiers actually had a life once and were here.' With each fire of the cannon, it served as a salute to those who fought, and the lives lost in the waters of Mobile Bay. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.