Magnolia Springs is a town in south Baldwin County, Alabama, United States, in the Daphne-Fairhope-Foley metropolitan area.
The origins of the community date back to the 1700s with the plantations of French and British settlers lining Magnolia River and Weeks Bay.
[5] One leaves "the Old Spanish Trail at the eastern head of the Cochrane Bridge, and drives south through Fairhope along Mobile Bay.
Ten or fifteen miles beyond is the pleasant little village of Magnolia Springs, and one is in the sandy Gulf Coast soil where these people have their farms and community life.
The clerk was a small man whose complexion had a hint of reddish brown, and he was one of the few men in the community who bore a French family name.
"[6]Several structures in the town are on the National Register of Historic Places, including Moore's Grocery and St. Paul's Episcopal Church.
Initially, the ordinance would have provided salaries of $200 a month for the mayor and $100 for council members, but this was altered to comply with tax reporting laws.