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St. Clair County was created by the Alabama Territorial legislature on 20 November 1818. The county was named for Gen. Arthur St. Clair of Pennsylvania, a hero of the American Revolution. It is located in the north central part of the Alabama and is bordered by Blount, Calhoun, Talladega, Shelby, and Jefferson Counties. St. Clair is the only county in Alabama to have two county seats. Ashville, originally called St. Clairsville, was named for John Ashe, a senator in the state's first General Assembly. Located in the northern part of the county, Asheville served as the county seat from 1821-1907. The Alabama Constitution of 1901 provided for Pell City in the southern part of the county to serve as the county seat for the Southern Judicial District of the county. A constitutional amendment in 1907 established Pell City, named for George H. Pell, an early settler, as the second county seat. Other towns and communities include Ragland and Springville.
Source: Owen, Thomas McAdory. History of Alabama and dictionary of Alabama biography . Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1921. |
Click on the links below for book titles specific to that Alabama county.
The date each county was formed is noted.
County Name |
Established |
Origin of Name |
County Seat |
Autauga |
Nov 21, 1818 |
American Indian Village of Atagi |
Prattville |
Baine, see Etowah | Dec 7, 1866 | Gen. David W. Baine, CSA | Gadsden |
Baldwin | Dec 21, 1809 | Sen. Abraham Baldwin/GA | Bay Minette |
Baker, see Chilton | Dec 30, 1868 | Alfred Baker | Grantville |
Barbour |
Dec 18, 1832 |
Gov. James Barbour/VA |
Clayton |
Benton, see Calhoun | Dec 18, 1832 | U.S. Sen. Thomas Hart Benton/MO | Jacksonville |
Bibb |
Feb 7, 1818 |
Gov. William W. Bibb |
Centreville |
Blount | Feb 6, 1818 | Gov. Willie G. Blount/TN | Oneonta |
Bullock | Dec 5, 1866 | Col. Edward C. Bullock | Union Springs |
Butler | Dec 13, 1819 | Capt. William Butler/Creek Wars | Greenville |
Cahawba, see Bibb | Feb 7, 1818 | Cahawba River, from Choctaw "water above" | Cahawba |
Calhoun | Dec 18, 1832 | Sen. John C. Calhoun/SC | Anniston |
Chambers | Dec 18, 1832 | Sen. Henry C. Chambers/AL | Lafayette |
Cherokee | Jan 9, 1836 | American Indian Tribe | Centre |
Chilton | Dec 30, 1868 | Confederate Cong. Wm. P. Chilton | Clanton |
Choctaw | Dec 29, 1847 | American Indian Tribe | Butler |
Clarke | Dec 10, 1812 | Gen. John Clarke/GA | Grove Hill |
Clay | Dec 7, 1866 | Sen. Henry Clay/KY | Ashland |
Cleburne | Dec 6, 1866 | Major Gen. Patrick Cleburne/AR | Heflin |
Coffee | Dec 29, 1841 | Gen. John Coffee | Elba |
Colbert | Feb 6, 1867 | Chiefs George & Levi Colbert | Tuscumbia |
Conecuh | Feb 13, 1818 | American Indian word | Evergreen |
Coosa | Dec 18, 1832 | Town of Alabama Indians | Rockford |
Cotaco; see Morgan | Feb 8, 1818 | Cotaco Creek | Somerville |
Covington | Dec 17, 1821 | Brig. Gen. Leonard Covington/MD | Andalusia |
Crenshaw | Nov 30, 1866 | Judge Anderson Crenshaw | Luverne |
Cullman | Jan 24, 1877 | Johann G. Cullmann | Cullman |
Dale | Dec 22, 1824 | Gen. Samuel Dale | Ozark |
Dallas | Feb 9, 1818 | A.J. Dallas, US Sec. of Treasury/PA | Selma |
Decatur | Dec. 7, 1821 | Commodore Stephen Decatur | Woodville |
DeKalb | Jan 9, 1836 | Major Gen. Baron DeKalb/Am. Rev. | Fort Payne |
Elmore | Feb 15, 1866 | Gen. John A. Elmore | Wetumpka |
Escambia | Dec 10, 1868 | American Indian name/river | Brewton |
Etowah | Dec 7, 1866 | Cherokee Indian name | Gadsden |
Fayette | Dec 20, 1824 | Marquis de LaFayette | Fayette |
Franklin | Feb 6, 1818 | Benjamin Franklin | Russellville |
Geneva | Dec 26, 1868 | Geneva, Switzerland | Geneva |
Greene | Dec 13, 1819 | Gen. Nathaniel Greene/GA | Eutaw |
Hale | Jan 30, 1867 | Col. Stephen F. Hale | Greensboro |
Hancock, seeWinston | Feb 12, 1850 | Gov. John Hancock/MA | Double Springs |
Henry | Dec 13, 1819 | Gov. Patrick Henry/VA | Abbeville |
Houston | Feb 9, 1903 | Gov. George S. Houston | Dothan |
Jackson | Dec 13, 1819 | Gen. Andrew Jackson | Scottsboro |
Jefferson | Dec 13, 1819 | Pres. Thomas Jefferson | Birmingham |
Jones, see Lamar | Feb 4, 1867 | E. P. Jones/Fayette County | Vernon |
Lamar | Feb 4, 1867 | Sen. L.Q.C. Lamar/MS | Vernon |
Lauderdale | Feb 6, 1818 | Col. James Lauderdale/TN | Florence |
Lawrence | Feb 6, 1818 | Capt. J. Lawrence, USN/VT | Moulton |
Lee | Dec 5, 1866 | Gen. Robert E. Lee | Opelika |
Limestone | Feb 6, 1818 | Limestone Creek | Athens |
Lowndes | Jan 20, 1830 | Cong. William Lowndes/SC | Hayneville |
Macon | Dec 18, 1832 | Sen. Nathaniel Macon/NC | Tuskegee |
Madison | Dec 13, 1808 | Pres. James Madison | Huntsville |
Marengo | Feb 6, 1818 | French battlefield | Linden |
Marion | Feb 13, 1818 | Gen. Francis Marion/SC | Hamilton |
Marshall | Jan 9, 1836 | Chief Justice John Marshall | Guntersville |
Mobile | Dec 18, 1812 | Named for Maubila Indians | Mobile |
Monroe | Jun 29, 1815 | Pres. James Monroe | Monroeville |
Montgomery | Dec 6, 1816 | Major L.P. Montgomery/TN | Montgomery |
Morgan | Feb 6, 1818 | Gen. Daniel Morgan/VA | Decatur |
Perry | Dec 13, 1819 | Commodore O.H. Perry/RI | Marion |
Pickens | Dec 20, 1820 | Gen. Andrew Pickens/SC | Carrollton |
Pike | Dec 17, 1821 | Gen. Zebulon M. Pike/NJ | Troy |
Randolph | Dec 18, 1832 | Sen. John Randolph/VA | Wedowee |
Russell | Dec 18, 1832 | Col. Gilbert C. Russell/Creek Wars | Phenix City |
Sanford, see Lamar | Feb 4, 1867 | H. C. Sanford/Cherokee County | Vernon |
St. Clair | Nov 20, 1818 | Gen. Arthur St. Clair/PA | Ashville |
Shelby | Feb 7, 1818 | Gov. Isaac Shelby/KY | Columbiana |
Sumter | Dec 18, 1832 | Gen. Thomas Sumter/SC | Livingston |
Talladega | Dec 18, 1832 | Town of Creek Indians | Talladega |
Tallapoosa | Dec 18, 1832 | American Indian name | Dadeville |
Tuscaloosa | Feb 6, 1818 | Chief Tuscaloosa | Tuscaloosa |
Walker | Dec 26, 1823 | Sen. John W. Walker | Jasper |
Washington | Jun 4, 1800 | Pres. George Washington | Chatom |
Wilcox | Dec 13, 1819 | Lt. J.M. Wilcox/Creek Wars | Camden |
Winston | Feb 12, 1850 | Gov. John A. Winston | Double Springs |