Visit Mobile encourages you to “be a tourist in your own city,” and follow along with our Destination Staycation series on FOX10 News's Studio 10.
In this installment, the focus is on America 250 in Mobile, highlighting the nation’s history and ways local residents can celebrate.
Chelsey was joined by Ashley Rains, senior PR and communications manager for Visit Mobile, to discuss excitement surrounding the semi quincentennial celebrations taking shape in the Port City.
Mobile: Older Than the Stars and Stripes
Rains says Mobile knows how to celebrate history. She notes Mobile is the oldest city in Alabama and was founded nearly 75 years before the United States declared independence.
Rains explains that for more than a year, organizations across the city have met to plan events honoring America’s 250th birthday. She adds that the Mobile Chamber and former Congressman Bradley Byrne have helped lead an initiative bringing together city and county attractions, museums, cultural heritage groups and other partners.
Rains says America 250 events, celebrations, and activities can be found in one place on Visit Mobile’s website.
Watch Destination Staycation on FOX10 America 250
Events Happening Soon
America 250 Audio History Tour is an experience pass available through Visit Mobile’s website. She says participants can visit historic parks, attractions and museums while listening to generations of oral histories. You can check in at each stop to earn points and qualify for prizes.
Sunday, June 28: 151st Army Band concert at Medal of Honor Park.
Wednesday, July 1: Mobile County Commission Government Plaza Pocket Park naming and dedication, followed by an America 250 kickoff party.
Fourth of July: Fireworks hosted by the City of Mobile at USS ALABAMA Battleship Memorial Park. Rains notes Mayor Spiro Cheriogotis announced a soft opening for Cooper Riverside Park, giving residents another place to watch fireworks.
Sunday, July 5 (starting at 4 p.m.): Colonial Fort Condé and the History Museum of Mobile present an annual living history program. At 5 p.m., the team plans to open the 1976 bicentennial time capsule, with guests able to view its contents until 7 p.m.
Events Happening After July 4
The annual Landing Event and Ancestor Festival, beginning the weekend of July 9 at the Africatown Heritage House.
A Historic Mobile Preservation Society discussion with historian Mike Bunn about the “fourteenth colony” during the Revolutionary War.
Community festivals throughout the year, including the Gulf Coast Ethnic & Heritage Jazz Festival, Culture Fest, Mobile Latin Fest, Greek Fest, and the Mobile International Festival.
Red, White and Read, a statewide literary initiative continuing through August.
An exhibit at the Mobile Museum of Art featuring “America 250 – Kent Portfolio,” a 1974 project with works by more than 100 artists reflecting on what independence means to them.