. As part of the French settlement of the Gulf Coast, the bayou was originally called "Riviere D'Erbane" and acquired the present name from the French-maintained battery of artillery on the west bank ("bayou of the battery"). Bayou La Batre was the first permanent settlement on the south
Mobile County mainland and was founded in 1786, when
Joseph Bouzage (Bosarge) [1733-95] moved into the area and was awarded a Spanish land grant on the bayou's west bank. Born in
Poitiers, France, Joseph Bouzage came to the Gulf Coast circa 1760, married Catherine Louise Baudreau (Boudreau) on June 5, 1762, and was the father of seven children, including one son,
Jean Baptiste. Bayou La Batre was founded in 1786, when French-born Joseph Bouzage (or Bosarge) [1733-1795] was awarded a Spanish land grant on the West Bank of the bayou. The modern city of Bayou La Batre was incorporated in 1955.
Hurricane Katrina . The M/V
Caribbean Clipper (left) was unloaded by crane six months later and refloated. On August 29, 2005, the area was devastated by
Hurricane Katrina, with a local storm surge of nearly and higher waves that engulfed Bayou La Batre and pushed over 23 shrimp boats and the cargo ship M/V
Caribbean Clipper onto shore. The captain rode out Katrina on the cargo ship, owned by Caribbean Shipping Inc., and the ship was returned to sea six months later, using a large crane. Students from the Alba Middle School documented the destruction through a series of photos that were exhibited at various venues in Alabama and the
Chicago, Illinois, region. Some of these were published in a book titled
Eyes of the Storm: A Community Survives after Katrina (). Immediately following the hurricane a group of high school students from Sierra High School in Truckee, California, adopted the city of Bayou La Batre. They sent roughly $15,000, supplies, and 15 students to help rebuild homes. Students gathered donations, sold raffle tickets, and filled their school's gym with supplies from bedding and clothes to basic household items. The school also set up a pen pal program with the students of the nearby school in Bayou La Batre. In October 2005, seven weeks after Hurricane Katrina, Bayou La Batre was adopted by the city of
Santa Monica, California (see: "Santa Monica Pier") to assist in clean-up activities. The Santa Monica City Council approved loaning Bayou La Batre 18 vehicles, including six pickups, two trucks with large cranes, utility vehicles with smaller cranes, a dump truck, street sweepers, a riding lawnmower, and six chainsaws. The equipment was used to help remove debris and fishing boats from downtown. ==Shipbuilding==