112 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 112 are listed here. ⊲ Previous 100
Historical Markers and War Memorials in Escambia County, Florida
Adjacent to Escambia County, Florida
▶ Santa Rosa County (65) ▶ Baldwin County, Alabama (132) ▶ Escambia County, Alabama (29)
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
| Near Fort Pickens Road 9.9 miles west of Pensacola Beach Road (State Road 399). Reported missing. |
| | In this vicinity Captain Richard G. Bradford of Madison was killed on October 9, 1861, during the Battle of Santa Rosa Island. The battle was fought in an attempt to capture Fort Pickens which protected Pensacola Harbor. Bradford was first . . . — — Map (db m149353) HM |
| On Fort Pickens Road 9 miles west of Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399), on the right when traveling west. |
| | These gravestones are from the Chasefield Plantation Cemetery, originally located on land that is now part of Pensacola Naval Air Station. They were moved to this location in 1957.
Chasefield Plantation was the home of William H. Chase, who . . . — — Map (db m80056) HM |
| On Fort Pickens Road 9.8 miles west of Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399), on the right when traveling south. |
| | Starting in the mid-1500s, the Pensacola area became a pawn in a European power struggle in the New World. Adventurers from Spain, France and Britain competed with each other to establish a foothold on the Gulf of Mexico. Spain established several . . . — — Map (db m80079) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road 9.8 miles west of Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399). |
| | Feel the grooves inside this rare cannon barrel. This Rodman cannon was cast in 1861 as a 10-inch smoothbore, which fired round cannonballs. To keep up with modern technology, the U.S. Army in 1884 inserted an 8-inch rifled sleeve into the old . . . — — Map (db m80080) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road 9.8 miles west of Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399). |
| | On the night of June 20, 1899, a fire broke out near a gunpowder magazine on the fort's northwest side. A bucket brigade fought the flames, but the blaze grew in intensity, forced the soldiers away from the cistern, and at 5:20 a.m. ignited 8,000 . . . — — Map (db m80081) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road 9.8 miles west of Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399). |
| | If you had been here on November 22 and 23, 1861, you would have been in the midst of a fierce Civil War battle. Union troops at Fort Pickens bombarded Confederates who, in January, had occupied Fort McRee straight ahead across the bay and Fort . . . — — Map (db m80083) HM |
| On Fort Pickens Road 1.2 miles west of Via de Luna Drive (State Road 399), on the left when traveling west. |
| | . . . — — Map (db m80036) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road 9.8 miles from Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399). |
| | Fort Pickens was past its prime. New rifled artillery could penetrate its brick walls. The U.S. Army resuscitated the antiquated brick fort in 1898 with reinforced concrete Battery Pensacola. The fort within a fort had two 12-inch rifles on . . . — — Map (db m80097) HM |
| On Fort Pickens Road near Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399), on the right when traveling north. |
| | On September 16, 2004, Hurricane Ivan roared across the Gulf of Mexico with 130-mile-per-hour winds and struck Santa Rosa Island and the national seashore's Fort Pickens head-on. A 14-foot storm surge washed across the island, destroyed piers and . . . — — Map (db m80099) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road near Pensacola Beach Boulevard (State Road 399). |
| | Fort Pickens played a critical role in an 1800s homeland-security program. Pickens was the largest of four forts the U.S. government built to protect Pensacola Bay and the Navy Yard. The fort succeeded, not against a foreign invasion, but against . . . — — Map (db m80098) HM |
| Near Fort Pickens Road near Pensacola Beach, Florida (State Road 399). |
| | Isolation and boredom, snakes and biting flies—many of the soldiers stationed at Fort Pickens in the 1800s and 1900s felt they had been sent to the end of the Earth and forgotten. They spent hours on end in the sweltering sun standing watch, . . . — — Map (db m80122) HM |
| On Perdido Key Drive, on the right when traveling east. |
| | Site of the floor safe of the original Flora-Bama, built in 1964,
by Theodore "Ted” Tampary, who, with his wife Ellen, had the
foresight to establish the iconic watering hole on the state line
after Florida traded two miles of pristine . . . — — Map (db m134214) HM |
112 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 112 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100