We can buy bananas whenever we want now but for much of the 19th century, the fruit was a rare and luxurious treat. Thankfully for Alabama fruit-lovers, the first banana shipment pulled into Mobile Bay in 1893,
Alabama continued to deal with snow on the ground on Thursday, two days after a historic Gulf Coast snowstorm. About 3 inches of snow was left on the ground Thursday morning at the National Weather Service office in Mobile. That’s nothing compared with the 7.5 inches the office had at the peak of the storm on Tuesday.
A record broken after 130 years, right here on the Gulf Coast. The Mobile Regional Airport reported seven and a half inches of snow. Hundreds of thousands of people waking up to a winter wonderland, something we’re not familiar with. Little ones setting their eyes on the snow for the first time ever.
It's been a while since it last snowed in Mobile, but snow is in the forecast for the city on Tuesday, and a winter storm watch is in effect. The photo above is from the Mobile office of the National Weather Service from a rare south Alabama snow in December of 1996. Joe Maniscalco/National Weather Service
The Pensacola area is forecast to receive between 4 to 6 inches of snow, but the National Weather Service says areas south of I-10 could see more.
Religious attendance is consistently correlated with higher levels of contentment and satisfaction. Here's what the research into that connection has revealed.
Buckle up, bargain hunters, because we’re heading to Dothan, Alabama – the peanut capital of the world and home to the one, the only, Sadie’s Flea Market. This isn’t just any flea market; it’s a Southern institution that’s been serving up deals hotter than an Alabama summer for years.
Alabama is a veritable goldmine for these sprawling bazaars of bygone treasures and modern marvels. So, grab your comfy shoes, bring your haggling A-game, and let’s embark on a journey through six of the Yellowhammer State’s most magnificent markets. First stop: Mobile, where the flea market is as massive as it is marvelous.
From snowball fights with nuns to Texas sledding and furry friends frolicking in the snow, see how people are reacting to winter weather in various parts of the U.S.
Meteorologists were left speechless Tuesday as record amounts of snow fell along the Gulf Coast. Here’s why it was so snowy.
A major winter storm slammed the US Gulf Coast Tuesday, blanketing parts of a region largely unaccustomed to extreme winter weather with record-breaking snowfall.
Parts of the Gulf Coast measured a foot of snow on Tuesday. For many cities the totals obliterate long-standing snowfall records. Milton, Florida recorded 9 inches of snow which more than doubles