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    Recommended Reviews - Fort Barrancas

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    Steps into the dark fort
    Jeff H.

    An excellent example of nicely preserved history from the Spanish of 1797! Very cool to just walk around and absorb the smells, history and creepiness of the old fort. There was no one there in February when I went, so I had free reign of the place. There's an old cell where, unfortunately and very sadly, a young confederate soldier was captured and put deep into the fort to rot and he eventually died after starvation of 26 days! Damn Yankees!!!

    Tony R.

    Cool Fort with plenty of history from Civil War. Located on the Naval Base famous for being Blue Angels training location. There is a small gift shop/information building with a Park Ranger that will tell you about the history and answer questions. It is a self guided tour but there is a map you can take that points out points of interest. There is also a hiking trail.

    Entrance
    Ramses C.

    I love this place. In the two years i lived in Pensacola I visited the fort about 5 times. I came with different friends as they came to visit me or new people who joined our program at UWF. They all loved it, and I never got bored of revisiting. I recommend making a day out, or at least dedicate about 4 or 5 hours to visiting the Naval Base. I usually start at the Fort because the mornings are cooler for the long walks through the bunkers. Then we go to the museum and end the day with a climb to the top of the lighthouse. The view is great when the sun frets closer to setting. You can bring lunch and have a picnick (they have tables behind the visitor center) or eat at the cafe in the museum. They have great food. Don't forget to bring water because it gets hot in the summer. But if you forget there's a water fountain behind the visitor center, across from the bathrooms.

    Pete S.

    This is a National Park but no one is there. You can walk around the outside but cannot enter the interior. We have been to many such forts and this is the first one that is not open.

    Interior

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    Ask the Community - Fort Barrancas

    Review Highlights - Fort Barrancas

    The entire fort was very clean and well kept.

    Mentioned in 2 reviews

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    Hyer-Knowles Planing Mill Chimney

    Hyer-Knowles Planing Mill Chimney

    4.0(5 reviews)
    11.7 mi

    A cool piece of history located just off of a main road. The Hyer-Knowles Mill was a major part of…read morethe industrial belt of Florida's Gulf Coast and was a testament to the strength of the lumber industry in the Florida Panhandle. Local mills including this one employed 600 people amongst them and produced almost 55 million feet of lumber in the 1850's. When the Union Army descending upon Pensacola, General Braxton Bragg ordered any Machinery that might be useful to the union to be destroyed. Machinery from the mill was loaded upon barges and evacuated. It is important that we remember what once was, what formed the history of where we stand. I seek out spots like this. What is a pawn spots like these that I stand in the shadow of yesterday and it has spots like these that will guide us to our tomorrows.

    Alongside Scenic Highway (it's literally called that), this little detour stop has a nice view of…read morethe bay but there's also a historical marker that explains why this large brick chimney is here. It looks like a smokestack. The marker reads, "The Chimney is the only trace of what once was the first major industrial belt on the Gulf Coast, a string of antebellum wood mills and brick factories. The chimney represents the lumber industry of the Florida Panhandle. As the lumber industry prospered in the 1850s, local mills employed 600 people and produced almost 55 million feet of lumber. The bricks in the base of the chimney bear the mark of J. Gonzalez", showing that they were produced at the local brick plant of James Gonzalez. The chimney was part of the steam power plant for the Hyers-Knowles Mill. In March 1862, General Braxton Bragg was evacuating the Confederate forces holding Pensacola when Confederate Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin gave the order to "Destroy all machinery private and public, which could be useful to the enemy; especially disable the sawmills in and around the Bay." The machinery from the mills was loaded onto barges which were moved into Escambia Bay. On March 10th a thunderstorm and large waves sank the barges. That same night the Hyer-Knowles Mill was burned, and all that is left is the chimney." Yes, Florida saw some conflicts between the Confederacy and the Union during the Civil War. [Review 14104 overall, 1426 of 2020, number 1163 in Florida.]

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    Hyer-Knowles Planing Mill Chimney
    Hyer-Knowles Planing Mill Chimney
    Hyer-Knowles Planing Mill Chimney

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    Fort Barrancas - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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