List of counties in Alabama
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The U.S. state of Alabama has sixty-seven counties. The oldest is Washington County (created June 4, 1800) and the youngest is Houston County (created February 9, 1903).
The land enclosed by the present state borders was joined to the United States of America piecemeal. Prior to permanent settlement by Europeans, there was an overlap between the areas claimed by Spain as Spanish Florida and by England as the Province of Carolina. However, the first permanent colony was established by the French on the banks of the Mobile River in 1702. A part of northern Alabama was granted to James Oglethorpe as part of Georgia in 1732 while France and England competed for alliances with native tribes. Great Britain took possession of France's territory in Alabama following the French and Indian War in 1763. They controled the area south of the 32nd parallel while the rest of the present-day state remained Indian territory.[citation needed]
Following the American Revolutionary War, West Florida south of the 31st parallel became a possession of Spain while the remainder was organized primarily as the Mississippi Territory, with narrow claims by Georgia and South Carolina persisting until 1804. The territorial assembly established some of the earliest county divisions which have survived to the present. The United States took control of the Mobile District of West Florida in 1813. In 1814 the Treaty of Fort Jackson opened the territory to American settlers. In 1817 the western part of the territory became the State of Mississippi and the remainder the Alabama Territory. The Alabama territorial legislature established several more county divisions. Alabama was admitted to the Union as the 22nd state in 1819. The Alabama state legislature formed additional counties from former Indian lands as the Indian Removal Act took effect and settlers populated different areas of Alabama. (See History of Alabama)[citation needed]
In 1820, Alabama had 29 counties. By 1830 there were 36, with Indians still occupying land in northeast and far western Alabama. By 1840, 49 counties had been created; 52 by 1850; 65 by 1870; and the present 67 counties by 1903.[1]
The Alabama Department of Revenue's Motor Vehicle Division issues standard automobile license plates bearing a one or two digit number identifying the county in which the vehicle is registered. This number is given in the fourth column in the table below. The prefixes proceed alphabetically, with the first three reserved for the state's historically most populous counties. (Note that St. Clair County (59) follows Shelby County (58) using the more common abbreviated form.) Individual license plate numbers are assigned sequentially in each licensing office. The numbers are in the format XA1111A or XXA111A, depending on whether the prefix is one or two digits. Madison County (47) has since surpassed Montgomery County (3) in population, but still uses its two-digit prefix. Overflow registrations are accommodated by substituting a letter for one of the registration numbers. (XXZ999Z is followed by XXA0A0A)[2]
According to 2006 U. S. Census estimates, the average population of Alabama's sixty-seven counties is 68,642, with Jefferson County as the most populous (656,700), and Greene County (9,374) the least. The average land area is 757 mi² (1,962 km²). The largest county is Baldwin (1,596 mi², 4,134 km²) and the smallest is Etowah (535 mi², 1,386 km²).[3] The constitution of Alabama requires that each county in Alabama cover at least 450 square miles in area. Proposals to split some counties (such as Jefferson County) into smaller units have been defeated on the grounds that one of the units would have been too small.[citation needed]
The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code, which is used by the United States government to uniquely identify counties, is provided with each entry. (In this system, St. Clair County is alphabetized ahead of Shelby County.) The FIPS code links in the table point to U. S. Census "quick facts" pages for each county.
Contents |
[edit] Sortable table
County |
FIPS Code [4] |
County seat [5] |
License # [2] |
Created [5] |
Origin [5] |
Etymolgy [1] |
Population [3] |
Area [3] |
Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Autauga County | 001 | Prattville | 4 | 1818 | Formed from Montgomery County |
Autauga Creek | 49,730 | mi² (1,544 km²) |
596 |
Baldwin County | 003 | Bay Minette | 5 | 1809 | Formed from Washington County and West Florida |
Abraham Baldwin (1754 – 1807), U.S. legislator from Georgia |
169,162 | ( 4,134 km²) |
1,596 sq mi|
Barbour County | 005 | Clayton | 6 | 1832 | Formed from Pike County |
James Barbour (1775 – 1842), Governor of Virginia and U.S. Senator |
28,171 | ( 2,292 km²) |
885 sq mi|
Bibb County | 007 | Centreville | 7 | 1818 | Formed from Montgomery County (as Cahawba County) | William Wyatt Bibb (1781 - 1820), Governor of Alabama |
21,482 | ( 1,614 km²) |
623 sq mi|
Blount County | 009 | Oneonta | 8 | 1818 | Formed from Montgomery County and Indian territories |
Willie Blount (1768 – 1835), Governor of Tennessee. |
56,436 | ( 1,673 km²) |
646 sq mi|
Bullock County | 011 | Union Springs | 9 | 1866 | Formed from Barbour, Macon, Montgomery, and Pike Counties | Edward Bullock, colonel in the Confederate States Army |
10,906 | ( 1,619 km²) |
625 sq mi|
Butler County | 013 | Greenville | 10 | 1819 | Formed from Conecuh and Monroe Counties |
William Butler, captain in Creek War |
20,520 | ( 2,012 km²) |
777 sq mi|
Calhoun County | 015 | Anniston | 11 | 1832 | Formed from St. Clair County (as Benton County) |
John C. Calhoun (1782 – 1850), 7th U.S. Vice President |
112,903 | ( 1,575 km²) |
608 sq mi|
Chambers County | 017 | LaFayette | 12 | 1832 | Formed from Montgomery County |
Henry H. Chambers (1790 - 1826), U.S. Senator |
35,176 | ( 1,546 km²) |
597 sq mi|
Cherokee County | 019 | Centre | 13 | 1836 | Formed from Cherokee territory |
Cherokee people | 24,863 | ( 1,432 km²) |
553 sq mi|
Chilton County | 021 | Clanton | 14 | 1868 | Formed from Autauga, Bibb, Perry, and Shelby Counties (as Baker County) |
William Parish Chilton (1810 – 1871), Alabama Supreme Court Justice and Confederate congressman |
41,953 | ( 1,797 km²) |
694 sq mi|
Choctaw County | 023 | Butler | 15 | 1847 | Formed from Sumter and Washington Counties |
Choctaw people | 14,656 | ( 2,367 km²) |
914 sq mi|
Clarke County | 025 | Grove Hill | 16 | 1812 | Formed from Washington County |
John Clarke, general in the Creek War from Georgia |
27,248 | ( 3,206 km²) |
1,238 sq mi|
Clay County | 027 | Ashland | 17 | 1866 | Formed from Randolph and Talladega Counties |
Henry Clay (1777 - 1852), U.S. legislator from Kentucky |
13,829 | ( 1,567 km²) |
605 sq mi|
Cleburne County | 029 | Heflin | 18 | 1866 | Formed from Calhoun, Randolph , and Talladega Counties |
Patrick Cleburne (1828 - 1864), major general in Confederate States Army |
14,700 | ( 1,450 km²) |
560 sq mi|
Coffee County | 031 | Elba | 19 | 1841 | Formed from Dale County |
John Coffee (1772 – 1833), military leader in War of 1812 and Creek War |
46,027 | ( 1,759 km²) |
679 sq mi|
Colbert County | 033 | Tuscumbia | 20 | 1867 | Formed from Franklin County |
George Colbert and Levi Colbert, Chickasaw chiefs |
54,766 | ( 1,541 km²) |
595 sq mi|
Conecuh County | 035 | Evergreen | 21 | 1818 | Formed from Monroe County |
Conecuh River | 13,403 | ( 2,204 km²) |
851 sq mi|
Coosa County | 037 | Rockford | 22 | 1832 | Formed from Montgomery County |
Coosa River | 11,044 | ( 1,689 km²) |
652 sq mi|
Covington County | 039 | Andalusia | 23 | 1821 | Formed from Henry County |
Leonard Covington (1768 – 1813), brigadier general in War of 1812 and U.S. Congressman |
37,234 | ( 2,678 km²) |
1,034 sq mi|
Crenshaw County | 041 | Luverne | 24 | 1866 | Formed from Butler, Coffee, Covington, Lowndes, and Pike Counties |
Anderson Crenshaw, settler of Butler County |
13,719 | ( 1,580 km²) |
610 sq mi|
Cullman County | 043 | Cullman | 25 | 1877 | Formed from Blount, Morgan, and Winston Counties |
Colonel John G. Kullmann, founder of county seat | 80,187 | ( 1,911 km²) |
738 sq mi|
Dale County | 045 | Ozark | 26 | 1824 | Formed from Covington and Henry Counties |
Samuel Dale (1772 – 1841), brigadier general and state legislator |
48,392 | ( 1,453 km²) |
561 sq mi|
Dallas County | 047 | Selma | 27 | 1818 | Formed from Monroe and Montgomery Counties |
Alexander James Dallas (1759 – 1817) , U.S. Secretary of Treasury |
43,945 | ( 2,541 km²) |
981 sq mi|
DeKalb County | 049 | Fort Payne | 28 | 1836 | Formed from Cherokee territory |
Johann de Kalb (1721 – 1780), major general in American Revolutionary War |
69,014 | ( 2,015 km²) |
778 sq mi|
Elmore County | 051 | Wetumpka | 29 | 1866 | Formed from Autauga, Coosa, Montgomery, and Tallapoosa Counties |
John Archer Elmore, Revolutionary War veteran |
75,688 | ( 1,608 km²) |
621 sq mi|
Escambia County | 053 | Brewton | 30 | 1868 | Formed from Baldwin and Conecuh Counties |
Escambia Creek | 37,849 | ( 2,453 km²) |
947 sq mi|
Etowah County | 055 | Gadsden | 31 | 1866 | Formed from Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, DeKalb, Marshall, and St. Clair Counties (as Baine County) |
Etowah Indian Mounds | 103,362 | ( 1,386 km²) |
535 sq mi|
Fayette County | 057 | Fayette | 32 | 1824 | Formed from Marion, Pickens, Tuscaloosa, and Walker Counties |
Marquis de La Fayette (1757 – 1834), Revolutionary War commander |
18,005 | ( 1,627 km²) |
628 sq mi|
Franklin County | 059 | Russellville | 33 | 1818 | Formed from Cherokee territory |
Benjamin Franklin (1706 – 1790), politician, diplomat, inventor, and publisher |
30,847 | ( 1,647 km²) |
636 sq mi|
Geneva County | 061 | Geneva | 34 | 1868 | Formed from Coffee, Dale, and Henry Counties |
county seat, named after Geneva, New York | 25,868 | ( 1,492 km²) |
576 sq mi|
Greene County | 063 | Eutaw | 35 | 1819 | Formed from Marengo and Tuscaloosa Counties |
Nathanael Greene (1742 – 1786), Revolutionary War general |
9,374 | ( 1,673 km²) |
646 sq mi|
Hale County | 065 | Greensboro | 36 | 1867 | Formed from Greene, Marengo, Perry, and Tuscaloosa Counties |
Stephen F. Hale, lieutenant colonel in Confederate States Army |
18,236 | ( 1,668 km²) |
644 sq mi|
Henry County | 067 | Abbeville | 37 | 1819 | Formed from Conecuh County |
Patrick Henry (1736 – 1799), Revolutionary War patriot and Governor of Virginia |
16,706 | ( 1,456 km²) |
562 sq mi|
Houston County | 069 | Dothan | 38 | 1903 | Formed from Dale, Geneva, and Henry Counties |
George S. Houston (1811 – 1879), Governor of Alabama and U.S. Congressman |
95,660 | ( 1,502 km²) |
580 sq mi|
Jackson County | 071 | Scottsboro | 39 | 1819 | Formed from Cherokee territory |
Andrew Jackson (1767 – 1845), U.S. President |
53,745 | ( 2,795 km²) |
1,079 sq mi|
Jefferson County | 073 | Birmingham | 1 | 1819 | Formed from Blount County |
Thomas Jefferson (1743 – 1826), U.S. President |
656,700 | ( 2,883 km²) |
1,113 sq mi|
Lamar County | 075 | Vernon | 40 | 1867 | Formed from Fayette and Marion Counties (as Jones County) |
Lucius Q. C. Lamar (1825 – 1893), U.S. Supreme Court justice |
14,548 | ( 1,567 km²) |
605 sq mi|
Lauderdale County | 077 | Florence | 41 | 1818 | Formed from Cherokee and Chickasaw territories |
James Lauderdale, Colonel in War of 1812 |
87,891 | ( 1,733 km²) |
669 sq mi|
Lawrence County | 079 | Moulton | 42 | 1818 | Formed from Cherokee territory |
James Lawrence, naval officer in War of 1812 |
34,312 | ( 1,795 km²) |
693 sq mi|
Lee County | 081 | Opelika | 43 | 1866 | Formed from Chambers, Macon, Russell, and Tallapoosa Counties |
Robert E. Lee, Commander of the Confederate States Army |
125,781 | ( 1,577 km²) |
609 sq mi|
Limestone County | 083 | Athens | 44 | 1818 | Formed from Elk and Madison Counties |
Limestone Creek | 72,446 | ( 1,471 km²) |
568 sq mi|
Lowndes County | 085 | Hayneville | 45 | 1830 | Formed from Butler, Dallas, and Montgomery Counties |
William Lowndes, U.S. Congressman from South Carolina |
12,759 | ( 1,860 km²) |
718 sq mi|
Macon County | 087 | Tuskegee | 46 | 1832 | Formed from Montgomery County |
Nathaniel Macon, U.S. legislator from North Carolina |
22,594 | ( 1,582 km²) |
611 sq mi|
Madison County | 089 | Huntsville | 47 | 1808 | Formed from Cherokee and Chickasaw territories |
James Madison, U.S. President |
304,307 | ( 2,085 km²) |
805 sq mi|
Marengo County | 091 | Linden | 48 | 1818 | Formed from Choctaw territory |
Battle of Marengo | 21,842 | ( 2,530 km²) |
977 sq mi|
Marion County | 093 | Hamilton | 49 | 1818 | Formed from Tuscaloosa County |
Francis Marion, military leader in American Revolutionary War |
30,165 | ( 1,919 km²) |
741 sq mi|
Marshall County | 095 | Guntersville | 50 | 1836 | Formed from Blount and Jackson Counties and Cherokee territory |
John Marshall, Chief Justice of the United States |
87,185 | ( 1,469 km²) |
567 sq mi|
Mobile County | 097 | Mobile | 2 | 1812 | Formed from Mobile District of West Florida after annexation into Mississippi Territory |
Mobile and Mobile Bay | 404,157 | ( 3,193 km²) |
1,233 sq mi|
Monroe County | 099 | Monroeville | 51 | 1815 | Formed from Creek territory |
James Monroe, U.S. President |
23,342 | ( 2,657 km²) |
1,026 sq mi|
Montgomery County | 101 | Montgomery | 3 | 1816 | Formed from Monroe County |
Lemuel Montgomery, Major in Creek War |
223,571 | ( 2,046 km²) |
790 sq mi|
Morgan County | 103 | Decatur | 52 | 1818 | Formed from Cherokee territory (as Cotaco County) |
Daniel Morgan, U.S. Congressman |
115,237 | ( 1,507 km²) |
582 sq mi|
Perry County | 105 | Marion | 53 | 1819 | Formed from Cahawba, Dallas, Marengo, and Tuscaloosa Counties |
Oliver Hazard Perry, naval officer in War of 1812 |
11,186 | ( 1,862 km²) |
719 sq mi|
Pickens County | 107 | Carrollton | 54 | 1820 | Formed from Tuscaloosa County |
Andrew Pickens or Israel Pickens | 20,133 | ( 2,282 km²) |
881 sq mi|
Pike County | 109 | Troy | 55 | 1821 | Formed from Henry and Montgomery Counties |
Zebulon Pike, explorer and officer in War of 1812 |
29,620 | ( 1,738 km²) |
671 sq mi|
Randolph County | 111 | Wedowee | 56 | 1832 | Formed from St. Clair and Shelby Counties |
John Randolph, U.S. Senator from Virginia |
22,673 | ( 1,505 km²) |
581 sq mi|
Russell County | 113 | Phenix City | 57 | 1832 | Formed from Montgomery and Pike Counties |
Gilbert Russell, officer in Creek War |
50,085 | ( 1,660 km²) |
641 sq mi|
St. Clair County | 115 | Ashville and Pell City | 59 | 1818 | Formed from Shelby County |
Arthur St. Clair, President of Continental Congress |
75,232 | ( 1,642 km²) |
634 sq mi|
Shelby County | 117 | Columbiana | 58 | 1818 | Formed from Montgomery County |
Isaac Shelby, Governor of Kentucky |
178,182 | ( 2,059 km²) |
795 sq mi|
Sumter County | 119 | Livingston | 60 | 1832 | Formed from Choctaw territory |
Thomas Sumter, U.S. legislator |
13,606 | ( 2,344 km²) |
905 sq mi|
Talladega County | 121 | Talladega | 61 | 1832 | Formed from St. Clair and Shelby Counties |
Talatigi, Creek Indian name for the county seat, meaning "border town" | 80,271 | ( 1,917 km²) |
740 sq mi|
Tallapoosa County | 123 | Dadeville | 62 | 1832 | Formed from Montgomery and Shelby Counties |
Tallapoosa River | 41,010 | ( 1,860 km²) |
718 sq mi|
Tuscaloosa County | 125 | Tuscaloosa | 63 | 1818 | Formed from Montgomery County and Choctaw territory |
Tuscaloosa River and county seat | 171,159 | ( 3,429 km²) |
1,324 sq mi|
Walker County | 127 | Jasper | 64 | 1823 | Formed from Blount, Jefferson, and Tuscaloosa Counties |
John Williams Walker, U.S. Senator from Alabama |
70,034 | ( 2,056 km²) |
794 sq mi|
Washington County | 129 | Chatom | 65 | 1800 | Formed from Adams and Pickering Counties of Mississippi Territory |
George Washington, U.S. President |
17,651 | ( 2,800 km²) |
1,081 sq mi|
Wilcox County | 131 | Camden | 66 | 1819 | Formed from Dallas and Monroe Counties |
Joseph Wilcox, lieutenant in Creek War |
12,911 | ( 2,302 km²) |
889 sq mi|
Winston County | 133 | Double Springs | 67 | 1850 | Formed from Walker County (as Hancock County) |
John A. Winston, Governor of Alabama |
24,634 | ( 1,590 km²) |
614 sq mi
[edit] Former counties and county names
- Baine County (for David W. Baine), changed to Etowah County in 1868
- Baker County (for Alfred Baker, a local landowner), changed to Chilton County in 1874
- Benton County, first named in 1832 for Thomas Hart Benton, who served as aide-de-camp to Andrew Jackson during the Creek War and, since 1820, a U. S. Senator from Missouri, where he settled. In 1849, Benton renounced his support for slavery, alienating him from the Democratic Party. He lost his seat in 1851, and in 1858 the name of the county was changed to Calhoun County, honoring Benton's Senate rival, the fiercely pro-southern John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, who had died earlier that year.
- Cahawba County, for the former capital city of Cahawba, changed to Bibb County in 1820
- Cotaco County (for Cotaco Creek), changed to Morgan County in 1821
- Elk County (for the Elk River), originally part of another Houston County (for John Houstoun), changed to Lauderdale County and Limestone County in 1818
- Hancock County (for John Hancock), changed to Winston County in 1858
- Jones County (for Josiah Jones, a local political leader), changed back to Covington County in 1868 after Jones refused the honor
- Jones County (for E. P. Jones), then Sanford County, before becoming Lamar County in 1877
- Sanford County (for H. C. Sanford), changed to Lamar County in 1877
[edit] Fictional counties of note
- See also: List of fictional counties
- Aurora County, the setting for several books by Deborah Wiles.
- Beechum County, the setting for the 1992 film, My Cousin Vinny.
- Greenbow County, the title character's birthplace in the 1994 feature film Forrest Gump, changed from Mobile in the 1986 Winston Groom novel.
- Maycomb County, the setting for Harper Lee's 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird, which was adapted into a feature film in 1962.
- Pearl County, the setting for William March's 1943 novel Looking Glass and of several of his short stories.
[edit] References
- CountyState.info Alabama. Official County Websites. Retrieved on 2007-09-13. - official sites
- ^ a b Foscue, Virginia O. (1989) Place Names in Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 081730410X
- ^ a b Nicholson, David. Alabama License Plates, 1969-present. License Plates of North America, 1969-present. Retrieved on 2007-08-08.
- ^ a b c Alabama QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau. State & County QuickFacts. Retrieved on 2007-12-11.
- ^ EPA County FIPS Code Listing. EPA.gov. Retrieved on 2008-02-23.
- ^ a b c National Association of Counties. NACo - Find a county. Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
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