Canoe Station - Canoe, AL
Posted by: hoteltwo
N 31° 01.581 W 087° 24.568
16R E 460920 N 3432594
Marker along Highway 31 near Atmore, notes the early settlement of rural area initially important during the Civil War and for its mineral springs.
Waymark Code: WMKCR4
Location: Alabama, United States
Date Posted: 03/21/2014
Views: 6
Marker Text:
Settled by A.J. Hall in 1852 and occupied by Confederate troops because of its value as a railroad stop during the War Between the States (1861-65), Canoe was the site of a March 27, 1865 encampment of Union forces. The 1870s brought expansion through the A.M. Lowery sawmill. The Farrar, Lowrey, Stanton, Watson, and other stores prospered (1890s-1950s). Schools educated the young and the L&N Railroad provided passenger service (1890-1960s).
The mineral springs was a social center and water was bottled and shipped from the site (early 1900s). WPA employed residents during the Great Depression (1930s). Local sons fought in WWII (1941-45). Many businesses had closed by the mid-1960s as larger commercial centers attracted Canoe’s residents.
Marker Name: Canoe Station
Marker Type: Rural Roadside
Addtional Information:: Erected by the William Carney Camp Sons of Confederate Veterans & Residents and the Alabama Historical Association.
Date Dedicated / Placed: 2007
Marker Number: Not Listed
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Visit Instructions:
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