1979 - Hurricane Frederick smashed into the Mobile Bay area of Alabama packing 132 mph winds. Winds gusts to 145 mph were reported as the eye of the hurricane moved over Dauphin Island AL, just west of Mobile. Frederick produced a fifteen foot storm surge near the mouth of Mobile Bay. The hurricane was the costliest in U.S. history causing 2.3 billion dollars damage.
More on this and other weather history
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 69. East southeast wind around 0 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 94. East northeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 67. East southeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Southeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 67. Southeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 94. West southwest wind 0 to 5 mph.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 66. East wind 0 to 5 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 95. East northeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 68. Southeast wind 0 to 5 mph.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 95.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 68.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 94.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 68.
Day: Sunny, with a high near 94.
Fri's High Temperature
103 at Rio Grande Village, TX
Fri's Low Temperature
22 at 14 Miles West-southwest Of Mackay, ID
Port Gibson is a city and the county seat of Claiborne County, Mississippi, United States. The population was 1,567 at the 2010 census. It is bordered on the west by the Mississippi River.
The first European settlers in Port Gibson were French colonists in 1729; it was part of their La Louisiane. After the United States acquired the territory from France in 1803 in the Louisiana Purchase, the town was chartered that same year. To develop cotton plantations in the area after Indian Removal of the 1830s, planters who moved to the state brought with them or imported thousands of enslaved African Americans from the Upper South, disrupting many families. Well before the Civil War, the majority of the county's population were enslaved.
Several notable people are natives of Port Gibson. The town saw action during the American Civil War. Port Gibson has several historical sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places (National Register of Historic Places listings in Claiborne County, Mississippi).
In the twentieth century, Port Gibson was home to The Rabbit's Foot Company. It had a substantial role in the development of blues in Mississippi, operating taverns and juke joints now included on the Mississippi Blues Trail.
In the second half of the twentieth century many jobs in agriculture were lost because of industrialization, which, combined with a lack of other jobs, has led to a substantial loss of population and to poverty in the city and the surrounding county. Port Gibson's population peaked in 1950. The last major employer, the Port Gibson Oil Works, a cottonseed mill, closed in 2002.
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