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History of Alabama (sandbox)
Alabama is the NNth state to join the United States of America, entering the union on 14 December 1819. The state is named for the Alabama River, which in turn is named for the Alabama Indians.
The region entered world history in 1540, when Hernando de Soto's expedition crossed the region and made war on its Mississippian natives.
The military defeat of the Creek Nation by Americans in 1814 propelled Andrew Jackson to nationwide fame and started a land rush to the Alabama region. The U.S. government forcibly removed Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Cherokee Indians from the state in the 1830s.
Alabama was a slave society.
Alabama seceded from the union in January 1861, and the separatist Confederate government was formed at Montgomery in February.
(Etc.)
Prehistoric Alabama
editMoundville culture
editEuropean settlement
editCreek War
editEarly statehood
editConfederate Alabama
editPostwar Alabama
editReferences
edit- Flynt, Wayne. Alabama in the Twentieth Century. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2004, 2006 (pbk.), 2009 (ebook).
- Gray, Daniel S., and J. Barton Starr. Alabama: A Place, a People, a Point of View. 1977.
- Griffith, Lucille, ed. Alabama: A Documentary History to 1900. 1972.
- Hamilton, Virginia Van der Veer. Alabama, A Bicentennial History. 1977.
- Moore, Albert Burton. History of Alabama. 1934.
- Owen, Thomas McAdory, and Marie Bankhead Owen. History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography. 4 vols. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1921.
- Pickett, Albert James. History of Alabama, and Incidentally of Georgia and Mississippi, from the Earliest Period. 1851.
- Rogers, William Warren, Robert David Ward, Leah Rawls Atkins, and Wayne Flynt. Alabama: The History of a Deep South State. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1994.