Crenshaw County, Alabama
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Crenshaw County, Alabama
Crenshaw County is a county located in the south central portion of the U.S. state of Alabama. It is located immediately south of the Montgomery metropolitan area. As of the 2020 census, the population was 13,194. Its county seat is Luverne. Its name is in honor of an Alabama judge, Anderson Crenshaw. History Crenshaw County was established after the American Civil War on November 30, 1866, by the Reconstruction era legislature. It was formed from parts of Butler, Coffee, Covington, Pike and Lowndes counties. While part of the coastal area, this county had relatively infertile soils, limiting cotton and other agriculture. Its planters used enslaved African Americans for all needed types of labor. Many of their descendants stayed in the area, and nearly one-quarter of the county population is African American. Crenshaw County became a center of timbering in the Piney Wood region, especially after the Montgomery and Florida Railroad Company constructed a line through the count ...
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Anderson Crenshaw
Anderson Crenshaw (1783–1847) was an American jurist in the U.S. state of Alabama. Born in South Carolina on May 22, 1783, Crenshaw was the first graduate of the South Carolina College at Columbia, later renamed the University of South Carolina. He became active in politics and was elected to the South Carolina General Assembly in 1812. Several years later in 1819 Crenshaw moved to Cahawba, the first state capital of Alabama. There, he was appointed a judge of the circuit court, serving from 1821–1838. He served as an associate judge of the state supreme court A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ... from 1832, and as chancellor of the southern division of the state's courts. He died in 1847. Honors In 1866 the Alabama state legislature named the newly created Cr ...
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