The first Constitutional Convention for Alabama was held in Huntsville from July 5 to August 2, 1819.
Alabama was admitted as the 22nd state on December 14, 1819.
St. Stephens, now abandoned, served as the territorial capital from 1817 to 1819.
The Alabama Territory was created by the United States Congress on March 3, 1817.
Thomas Bassett was a loyalist to the British monarchy during the Revolutionary era and one of the earliest white settlers in Alabama outside Mobile. He settled in the Tombigbee District during the early 1770s.
The Tombigbee District in Alabama covered the area within a few miles of the Tombigbee River, including portions of what is today southern Clarke County, northernmost Mobile County, and most of Washington County.
Baldwin and Mobile counties became part of Spanish West Florida in 1783, part of the independent Republic of West Florida in 1810, and finally part of the Mississippi Territory in 1812.
The Yazoo lands referred to most of what is now the northern two-thirds of Alabama, claimed by the Province of Georgia from 1767 onwards. Following the Revolutionary War, it remained part of Georgia until added to the Mississippi Territory ...Read more
Alabama’s coastal counties, part of the former Spanish West Florida territory, officially became part of the United States in 1819 with the AdamsβOnΓs Treaty.
The French controlled Alabama from 1702 to 1763 as part of La Louisiane. After the French lost to the British in the Seven Years’ War, it became part of British West Florida from 1763 to 1783. Following the American ...Read more