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Infirmary Health is Alabama’s largest nonprofit, non-governmental health care system. The 200-year-old Mobile County Health Department (MCHD) provides education and preventive health services to Mobile and surrounding areas. When MAWSS was founded in 1814, it used Three-Mile Creek to provide water to the city. In 2016, Spire Inc. bought EnergySouth, Inc, the parent company of Mobile Gas and has been provide the service to the surrounding community since then. This cessation of cruise service left the city with an annual debt service of around two million dollars related to the terminal. The public terminals handle containerized, bulk, breakbulk, roll-on/roll-off, and heavy-lift cargoes.
The Mobile Police Department Museum chronicles the history of the city’s law enforcement. It serves as the official welcome center and a colonial-era living history museum. The Fort of Colonial Mobile is a reconstruction of the city’s original Fort Condé, built on the original fort’s footprint.
For 2024, the city received $281.7 million in sales tax, $34.5 million in property tax, and $90.1 million for services such as business licenses. Of the property tax paid in the city, 11% goes to the city, 32% goes to the county, 10% goes to the state, and 47% goes to the school districts. Sam Jones was elected in 2005 as the first African-American mayor of Mobile. The council members are elected from each of the seven city council single-member districts (SMDs).
The Alabama State Port Authority owns and operates the public terminals at the Port of Mobile. The Wave Transit System provides fixed-route bus and demand-response service in Mobile. The linear park will ultimately span seven miles, from Langan (Municipal) Park to Dr. Martin Luther King Junior Avenue, and include trailheads, sidewalks, and bike lanes. Greyhound Lines provides intercity bus service between Mobile and many locations throughout the United States. Eventually, it was determined that a pocket track and a platform would be constructed for service to resume. The city was served by Amtrak’s Sunset Limited passenger train service until 2005, when the service was suspended due to the effects of Hurricane Katrina.
The Mobile Medical Museum in the French colonial-style Vincent-Doan House chronicles the history of medicine in the city. The Phoenix Fire Museum in the restored Phoenix Volunteer Fire Company Number 6 building covers fire companies dating to 1838. The History Museum of Mobile showcases centuries of local history in the Old City Hall. Battleship Memorial Park is a military park on the shore of Mobile Bay. The Centre for the Living Arts is an organization that operates the historic Saenger Theatre and Space 301, a contemporary art gallery. The museum was expanded in 2002 to approximately 95,000 square feet (8,826 m2).
Other railroads include the CG Railway (CGR), a rail ship service to Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, and the Terminal Railway Alabama State Docks (TASD), a switching railroad. Mobile is served by four Class I railroads, including the Canadian National lizaro Railway (CNR), CSX Transportation (CSX), the Kansas City Southern Railway (KCS), and the Norfolk Southern Railway (NS). A total of 43 FM radio stations and 12 AM radio stations are located around the Mobile area and provide signals sufficiently strong to serve Mobile. Mobile is served locally by several over-the-air television stations including WKRG 5 (CBS), WALA 10 (Fox), WPMI 15 (Roar), WMPV 21 (religious), WDPM 23 (religious), WEIQ 42 (PBS), and WFNA 55 (The CW). Mobile’s alternative newspaper is the Lagniappe which was founded on July 24, 2002. Several post-secondary vocational institutions have a campus in Mobile including Fortis College, Virginia College, ITT Technical Institute and Remington College.
It features the World War II era battleship USS Alabama, the World War II era submarine USS Drum, Korean War and Vietnam War Memorials, and historical military equipment. Its local history and genealogy division is located near the Ben May Main Library on Government Street. The Doy Leale McCall Rare Book and Manuscript Library at the University of South Alabama are open to the public and house primary sources relating to the history of the university, Mobile, and southern Alabama. The National African American Archives and Museum features the history of African-American participation in Mardi Gras, slavery-era artifacts, and portraits and biographies of famous African Americans.
Mobile’s public transportation is the Wave Transit System which features buses with 18 fixed routes and neighborhood service. MCPSS has an enrollment of approximately 52,000 students at 92 schools, employs approximately 7,200 public school employees, and had a budget in 2024–2025 of $843 million. Langan Park, the largest of the parks at 720 acres (291 ha), features lakes, natural spaces, and contains the Mobile Museum of Art, Azalea City Golf Course, Mobile Botanical Gardens and Playhouse in the Park.
But Alabama’s white yeomanry had historically favored single-member districts in order to elect candidates of their choice. In 1911 the city adopted a commission form of government, which had three members elected by at-large voting. The last quarter of the 19th century was a time of economic depression and municipal insolvency for Mobile. The explosion left a 30-foot (9 m) deep hole at the depot’s location, and sank ships docked on the Mobile River; the resulting fires destroyed the northern portion of the city. On May 25, 1865, the city suffered great loss when some three hundred people died as a result of an explosion at a federal ammunition depot on Beauregard Street. The H. L. Hunley, the first submarine to sink an enemy ship, was built in Mobile.