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  • DID Bonus Material - Interview with Shari Pope Moon
    2026/06/03

    🎙️ FREE INTERVIEW RELEASE 🎙️

    This week, we're opening up a conversation that has never been released before.

    Back in March, I sat down with Shari Pope Moon in Cadillac Square on Dauphin Island. We weren't in a studio. We weren't in front of a microphone booth. We were sitting at a picnic table under the trees, listening to the sounds of the island around us and talking about family, memory, and the place that has shaped generations of her family.

    What followed was less of an interview and more of a conversation.

    Shari shares the story of her parents' island love story, the family tradition that has brought generations back to Dauphin Island year after year, the old casino and Isle Dauphine Club, the original drawbridge, Hurricane Frederic, Fort Gaines, the Deep Sea Fishing Rodeo, and what makes this island feel like home to so many people.

    If you've ever wondered why people fall in love with Dauphin Island and keep coming back generation after generation, this conversation helps explain it.

    So grab your favorite beverage, settle in, and join us for this previously unreleased conversation with Shari Pope Moon.

    🌊 Available now.

    #DauphinIslandDiaries

    #DauphinIsland

    #MobileBay

    #GulfCoastHistory

    #SummersMediaEnterprises

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd! https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Advertise with us! John.summers@summersmediaenterprises.com

    Check out our merchandise! www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    1 時間 56 分
  • DID Ep 4 - The World Is Your Oyster
    2026/05/25

    Long before tourists crossed the bridge to Dauphin Island…before beach houses lined the west end…and before seafood restaurants turned oysters into a delicacy for visitors…there were people whose entire lives revolved around the waters of Mobile Bay.

    Shrimpers. Fishermen. Oystermen.

    For generations, oysters were part of the rhythm of life along the Alabama Gulf Coast. Families harvested them from the shallow waters of Mobile Bay, Bon Secour Bay, Mississippi Sound, and the waters around Dauphin Island. Entire communities depended on them. In places like Bayou La Batre and Bon Secour, oysters helped sustain a working waterfront culture that stretched back long before modern tourism arrived on the coast.

    In this episode, we explore the long and complicated history of the oyster industry in the Mobile Bay region—from the Native American shell mounds at Dauphin Island and Bottle Creek…to the heyday of commercial oystering…to the environmental struggles threatening the reefs today.

    This episode also explores how oysters are more than just seafood. Oyster reefs filter the water, stabilize shorelines, provide habitat for marine life, and help define the ecological health of Mobile Bay itself. As the reefs declined, the impacts rippled outward across the bay’s entire ecosystem and the communities that depended on it.

    But this is not simply a story of decline.

    It is also a story of resilience.

    Scientists, conservationists, oystermen, volunteers, and local organizations across Coastal Alabama are working to restore oyster populations through reef rebuilding projects, oyster gardening programs, hatcheries, aquaculture, and new restoration technologies. In many ways, the future of Mobile Bay may depend on whether those efforts succeed.

    This is the story of oysters, ecology, livelihood, restoration, and survival along the Alabama Gulf Coast.

    Key Sources

    May 11, 2026 interview with Jason Herrmann, Alabama Marine Resources Division

    May 21, 2026 Gulf Chat presentation by Roberta Swann at the National Maritime Museum of the Gulf:
    “A Yankee Does Good: Stirring Gumbo, Raising Ruckus, and Cleaning Water”

    Mobile Bay National Estuary Program resources and educational materials

    Mobile Baykeeper oyster restoration, oyster gardening, and reef restoration resources

    Alabama Reflector — “In Mobile Bay, the oysters’ tale of woe” by Lanier Isom

    1819 News — reporting on dredging spoil concerns and oyster reef impacts

    Mobile Bay Magazine — “An Ode to Oysters” by Scotty Kirkland

    Alabama Public Radio / NPR — reporting on oyster restoration and predator conditioning research at Dauphin Island Sea Lab

    OBA News — “Mobile Bay and Apalachicola Bay Rebuild Historic Oyster Populations”

    Alabama Buzz — Mobile Baykeeper oyster restoration coverage

    Credits

    Hosted by Big John Summers
    Produced by Summers Media Enterprises

    Foley/Sound effect recordings by Big John Summers

    Follow & Support

    Follow Dauphin Island Diaries on Facebook for:
    • On-location videos
    • Historical insights
    • Episode updates
    • Gulf Coast history content

    Support the show on Patreon for:
    • Early access
    • Ad-free listening
    • Bonus content
    • Extended interviews

    🔗 Links

    🎧 Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    🧢 Merch:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    🎤 Speaking:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/speaking-engagements

    📘 Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/DauphinIslandDiaries/

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Subscribe to Patreon:
    Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd! https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Advertise with us! John.summers@summersmediaenterprises.com

    Check out our merchandise! www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    39 分
  • DID Ep 3 - Life After the Final Voyage
    2026/05/11

    Artificial reefs are one of the Alabama Gulf Coast’s strangest success stories.

    What began decades ago with fishermen dropping old cars and scrap into the Gulf evolved into one of the largest artificial reef systems in the world. Today, thousands of reefs dot the waters off Alabama’s coast—from retired ships and military tanks to specially designed reef pyramids built to create new marine habitat.

    In this episode, we explore how artificial reefs transformed the waters off Dauphin Island and the Alabama coast, changing not only fishing and diving culture, but the ecology of the Gulf itself.

    We examine the rise of Alabama’s reef-building program, the science behind why reefs work, and the ongoing debates surrounding them. Along the way, we dive into stories of sunken warships, offshore platforms turned “vertical reefs,” invasive lionfish, Red Snapper management, and the strange afterlife of vessels whose final voyage became a new beginning beneath the waves.

    This is the story of how steel, concrete, and even forgotten ships became living ecosystems—and how the Gulf continues to reinvent itself one reef at a time.

    Key Sources

    Wicksten, Mary K. Vertical Reefs: Life on Oil and Gas Platforms in the Gulf of Mexico

    Walter, David. Reef Making: Transforming Oceans One Artificial Reef at a Time

    Outdoor Alabama — Alabama Marine Resources Division artificial reef resources and historical documentation

    Zhorov, Irina. “The Booming Business of Alabama’s Artificial Reefs.” NOEMA Magazine (2024)

    Grollimund, Tim. Diving the Spiegel Grove… Wreck or Reef?

    Douglass, Scott L. “Alabama’s Coastline.” Encyclopedia of Alabama

    Biodiversity Foundation — Lionfish and invasive species educational materials

    Gulf Shores & Orange Beach tourism and reef program historical materials

    On-site research and field recordings conducted at Dauphin Island and along the Alabama Gulf Coast

    Credits

    Hosted by Big John Summers
    Produced by Summers Media Enterprises

    Foley/Sound effect recordings by Big John Summers

    Follow & Support

    Follow Dauphin Island Diaries on Facebook for:

    • On-location videos
    • Historical insights
    • Episode updates

    Support the show on Patreon for:

    • Early access
    • Ad-free listening
    • Bonus content

    🔗 Links

    🎧 Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    🧢 Merch:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    🎤 Speaking:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/speaking-engagements

    📘 Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/DauphinIslandDiaries/

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd! https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    31 分
  • DID Ep 2 - Ancient Snowbirds: How We Got the Shell Mounds
    2026/04/27

    The shell mounds of Dauphin Island are among the oldest man-made features on the island—but they are not what they first appear to be.

    Built over generations by indigenous peoples connected to the Bottle Creek site in the Mobile-Tensaw Delta, these mounds are the accumulated remains of seasonal life along the Gulf Coast—layers of oyster shells, tools, and fire debris that reveal how people lived, adapted, and returned to this place year after year.

    In this episode, we explore the origins of the shell mounds, the people who created them, and the role Dauphin Island played as a seasonal refuge—what we might call, in a modern sense, an ancient “snowbird” destination.

    We also examine how these sites were later used for burial, diplomacy, and resource extraction, and how natural and human changes have reshaped both the island and the ecosystems that once made it so vital.

    This is the story of a place where memory, survival, and landscape come together—layer by layer.

    Key Sources

    • Saunders, Rebecca. Archaic Shell Mounds in the American Southeast, in The Oxford Handbook of Topics in Archaeology
    • Encyclopedia of Alabama — Bottle Creek Site
    • University of Alabama Office of Archaeological Research — interpretive materials
    • Young, Frances. A History of Dauphin Island Under Five Flags
    • Coastal and environmental resources on Dauphin Island ecology and migratory bird patterns
    • On-site research and guided interpretation from the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
    • In-person interview with John Mareska of the Alabama Marine Resources Division of the Conservation and Natural Resources Department

    Credits

    Hosted by Big John Summers
    Produced by Summers Media Enterprises

    Follow & Support

    Follow Dauphin Island Diaries on Facebook for:

    • On-location videos
    • Historical insights
    • Episode updates

    Support the show on Patreon for:

    • Early access
    • Ad-free listening
    • Bonus content

    🔗 Links

    🎧 Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    🧢 Merch:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    🎤 Speaking:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/speaking-engagements

    📘 Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/DauphinIslandDiaries/

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd! https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Advertise with us! John.summers@summersmediaenterprises.com

    Check out our merchandise! www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    34 分
  • DID Ep 1 - The Complicated Story of Fort Gaines
    2026/04/22

    On the eastern end of Dauphin Island stands Fort Gaines—a quiet coastal fort with a long and complicated past.

    Built to guard the entrance to Mobile Bay, Fort Gaines has stood through shifting flags, changing purposes, and one of the most decisive naval engagements of the Civil War. But its story is not as simple as a single battle or a single moment in time.

    In this episode, we explore the origins of the fort, its role in the Battle of Mobile Bay, and the layers of history that surround it—from early coastal defenses to later abandonment and preservation.

    This is the story of a place shaped as much by what happened around it as by what happened within its walls.


    Sources:

    • American Battlefield Trust. “James Wilkinson.”
    • Encyclopedia of Alabama — entries on Dauphin Island and Forts Morgan and Gaines
    • Fort Gaines Historic Site — historical materials
    • Jones, R. C. Alabama and the Civil War: History & Guide
    • Webb, P. L. Mobile Under Siege
    • Smithweck, D. The USS Tecumseh in Mobile Bay
    • Chambers, H. E. West Florida and its relation to the historical cartography of the United States (historical map)
    • On-site research materials from Fort Gaines Museum and Dauphin Island Welcome Center, including exhibits on construction, the Battle of Mobile Bay, and firsthand accounts from the Voices From the Pastexhibit


    Credits:

    Hosted by Big John Summers
    Produced by Summers Media Enterprises


    Follow & Support:

    Follow The Tennessee History Nerd on Facebook, Instagram, and X for additional content, including on-location videos and historical insights from around the state of Tennessee as well as other places that bear relevance.

    Support the show on Patreon for:

    • Early access to episodes
    • Ad-free listening
    • Exclusive bonus content, including full-length interviews


    🔗 Links

    🎧 Support the show on Patreon (early access, bonus content, interviews):
    https://www.patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    🧢 Merch & Apparel:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    🎤 Book John for Speaking Engagements:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/speaking-engagements

    📘 Follow on Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/DauphinIslandDiaries/

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    Check out The Tennessee History Nerd! https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/podcasts/tthn

    Advertise with us! John.summers@summersmediaenterprises.com

    Check out our merchandise! www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    Subscribe to Patreon! Patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    25 分
  • DID Ep 0 - Dauphin Island Diaries Introduction
    2026/04/10

    Welcome to Dauphin Island Diaries, a podcast dedicated to the stories, history, and hidden corners of Alabama’s Gulf Coast.

    This introductory episode sets the stage for what’s to come—stories rooted in real places, shaped by the people who lived them, and connected to a landscape that still holds their memory.

    From coastal forts and lighthouses to hurricanes, shipwrecks, and the quiet details that most people miss, this series is about more than just history—it’s about understanding the place itself.

    If you enjoy place-based storytelling, where each episode connects you to a real location you can visit, you’re in the right place.

    Sources:

    This episode serves as an introduction to the series and does not rely on specific historical sources. Future episodes will include full source acknowledgments tied to each story.

    Credits:

    Hosted by Big John Summers
    Produced by Summers Media Enterprises

    Follow & Support:

    Follow The Tennessee History Nerd on Facebook, Instagram, and X for additional content, including on-location videos and historical insights from around the state of Tennessee as well as other places that bear relevance.

    Support the show on Patreon for:

    • Early access to episodes
    • Ad-free listening
    • Exclusive bonus content, including full-length interviews

    🔗 Links

    🎧 Support the show on Patreon (early access, bonus content, interviews):
    https://www.patreon.com/summersmediaenterprises

    🧢 Merch & Apparel:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/merch

    🎤 Book John for Speaking Engagements:
    https://www.summersmediaenterprises.com/speaking-engagements

    📘 Follow on Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/DauphinIslandDiaries/

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, share it with someone who loves history, and leave a review—it helps more folks discover the stories of Dauphin Island, Mobile Bay, and the Gulf Coast.

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    5 分