St. Andrew Bay Saltworks

(click on picture to view site in Google
Maps)
Marker Location:
James R. Asbell Park, West Beach Drive at Caroline Blvd., Panama City
County: Bay
City: Panama City
Description:
Between 1861 and 1865, the
St. Andrew Bay Saltworks, one of the largest producers of salt in the South,
contributed to the Confederate cause by providing salt, fish and cattle for
southern troops and citizens. A necessary preservative in those times, salt sold
for as much as $50 per bushel, and was produced in wood-fired saltworks on the
perimeter of the West Bay, East Bay and North Bay and Lake Powell (a.k.a. Lake
Ocala). An estimated 2,500 men, primarily from Florida, Georgia and Alabama,
were exempted from combat duty in order to labor in the saltworks. The salt was
transported to Eufaula, Alabama, then to Montgomery, for distribution throughout
the Confederate states. Because of the importance of St. Andrew Bay Saltworks to
the Confederacy, acting Master W.R. Browne, commander of the U.S. Restless, was
instructed to commence a series of assaults beginning in August 1862. In
December 1863, additional Union attacks occurred, which Confederate home guards
could not resist. The attacks resulted in the destruction of more than 290
saltworks, valued by Master Browne at more than $3,000,000. The St. Andrew Bay
Saltworks employees promptly rebuilt them, and they remained in operation
through February 1865.
For more information about the Civil War in the St. Andrews Bay region,
read:
ExploreSouthernHistory.com
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