Lillian CDP, Alabama – Racial and Ethnic Composition (NH = Non-Hispanic) Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race.
The community was named for Lillian Kee, the daughter of William Thomas Kee, postmaster.[5] In 1630, the King of Spain gave land grants to the Suarez family that included the current site of Lillian.[6] The Baldwin Colonization Company purchased the area around Lillian in 1923 to promote the area as a resort location. Lillian was once home to a school and hotel.[7] The hotel was originally located in Elberta then dismantled and moved to Lillian.[8]
The Lillian post office was established in 1884.[9]
The Perdido Bay Bridge, which spans Perdido Bay from Lillian to Florida, was first constructed in 1916. The bridge replaced a ferry that operated between Alabama and Florida.[7] The original bridge was operated by the Perdido Bay Bridge and Ferry Company, but ownership was transferred to the states of Alabama and Florida when a second bridge was completed in 1930.[10] The bridge was originally operated as a toll bridge, but tolls were discontinued in 1943.[11] The current bridge was completed in 1980.[7]
The Old Spanish Cemetery in Lillian includes burials from as early as the 16th century.[12][13]
The Lillian Swamp is managed as a nature preserve as part of the Forever Wild Land Trust.[14] The swamp is also listed as an Alabama Gulf Ecological Management Site due to its importance as an estuarine habitat and stopover for migratory birds.[15]