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History of the borders of Alabama
{{Short description|none}}
{{Infobox Political post
|post = Lieutenant Governor
|body = Alabama
|insignia = Seal of the Lieutenant Governor of Alabama.svg
|insigniasize = 115
|insigniacaption = ]
|image =
|incumbent = ]
|incumbentsince = January 14, 2019
|style = The Honorable
|department = ]
|termlength = Four years, renewable once
|inaugural = ]
|formation = 1868
|salary = $68,556
|website = {{url|ltgov.alabama.gov}}
}}
The '''lieutenant governor of Alabama''' is the president of the ], elected to serve a four-year term. The office was created in 1868,<ref name="1868const-art5sec1">1868 Const. art. V, § 1</ref> abolished in 1875,<ref name="1875const-art5sec1">1875 Const. art. V, § 1</ref> and recreated in 1901.<ref name="const-art5sec112">AL Const. art. V, § 112</ref> According to the current constitution, should the governor be out of the state for more than 20 days, the lieutenant governor becomes ], and if the governor dies, resigns or is removed from office (via impeachment), the lieutenant governor ascends to the governorship.<ref>AL Const. art. V, § 127</ref> Earlier constitutions said the powers of the governor devolved upon the successor, rather than them necessarily becoming governor,<ref>1819 Const. art. IV, § 18; 1861 Const. art. IV, § 18; 1865 Const. art V, § 19; 1868 Const. art. V, § 15; 1875 Const. art. V § 15</ref> but the official listing includes these as full governors.<ref name="adah">{{cite web |url=http://www.archives.state.al.us/govslist.html |title=Alabama Governors |publisher=] |access-date=April 10, 2012}}</ref> The governor and lieutenant governor are not elected on the same ].


== History == ==content==
] was organized from the eastern half of ] on March 3, 1817.<ref>{{usstat|3|371}}</ref>{{sfn|Van Zandt|1976|pp=108-109}} The act defined its borders as:
In 1868, the state of Alabama issued a constitution which provided for the office of lieutenant governor. The document prescribed that the officer was to serve as the president of the ] and cast tie-breaking votes in that body, and made them first in line of succession to the governor's office.<ref name= moody/> ] was the first person to serve as lieutenant governor.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/reconstruction-constitutions/| title = Reconstruction Constitutions| last = Shiver| first = Joshua| date = March 27, 2023| website = Encyclopedia of Alabama| publisher = Alabama Humanities Alliance| access-date = July 12, 2023}}</ref> In 1875, ]s determined the content of a new constitution which abolished the office in an attempt to reduce the size of state government. Alabama convened another constitutional convention in 1901. During its session, the incumbent governor died. Partly motivated by the lack of a clearly delineated line of gubernatorial succession, the delegates reestablished the office of lieutenant governor with responsibilities similar to those it previously held. Its constitutional responsibilities have been little altered since.<ref name= moody>{{cite web| url = https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/office-of-the-lieutenant-governor/| title = Office of the Lieutenant Governor| last = Moody| first = Brad| date = March 27, 2023| website = Encyclopedia of Alabama| publisher = Alabama Humanities Alliance | access-date = July 10, 2023}}</ref>
<blockquote>...beginning at the point where the line of the thirty-first degree of north latitude intersects the Perdido river, thence east to the western boundary line of the state of Georgia, thence along said line to the southern boundary line to the state of Tennessee, thence west along said boundary line to the Tennessee river, thence up the same to the mouth of Bear creek, thence by a direct line to the north-west corner of Washington county, thence due south to the Gulf of Mexico, thence eastwardly, including all the islands within six leagues of the shore, to the Perdido river, and thence up the same to the beginning...</blockquote>


The border between Georgia and Spanish Florida along the ] was surveyed in 1799 by ], and this line was inherited by Alabama Territory.
Since the office's inception, 31 people have served as lieutenant governor of Alabama. Of those, only two have served two terms or more. The first woman to hold the office, ], served from 2003 to 2007.<ref name= moody/>


The western boundary of Georgia was defined in 1802 as:
== Duties, powers, and structure ==
<blockquote>... a line beginning on the western bank of the Chatahouchie River where the same crosses the boundary line between the United States and Spain; running thence up the said River Chatahouchie, and along the western bank thereof to the great bend thereof, next above the place where a certain creek
The lieutenant governor serves as president of the State Senate and assumes the office of governor in the event the gubernatorial office becomes vacant.<ref>{{cite news| title = On more look at what's on the Alabama ballot| newspaper = The Dothan Eagle| agency = Associated Press| page = A8 | date = November 8, 2022| url = https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-dothan-eagle/128081504/}}</ref> Senate rules empower the lieutenant governor to determine the composition of Senate committees and refer bills to committees of their choosing. As a result, the lieutenant governor typically exercises significant influence over the progress of legislation in the body.<ref name= moody/>
or river, called "Uchee" (being the first considerable stream on the western side, above the Cussetas and Coweta towns), empties into the Chatahouchie River; thence in a direct line to Nickajack, on Tennessee River; thence crossing the said last-mentioned river, and thence running up the said Tennessee River and along the western bank thereof to the southern boundary line of the State of Tennessee.</blockquote>


The location of Nickajack was surveyed in 1818, with the report being filed on July 13,<ref>https://dlg.usg.edu/record/dlg_zlna_tcc775?canvas=0&x=400&y=400&w=1164</ref> and it being approved on December 18, though it is an open question whether that law was sufficient.<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/40577307?searchText=georgia+tennessee+line&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Dgeorgia%2Btennessee%2Bline%26so%3Drel&ab_segments=0%2Fbasic_search_gsv2%2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3A192d121bc98e4e65840ae02d9d42c549&seq=10 page 278</ref>. While the southern boundary of Tennessee was intended to be the ], the line was incorrectly surveyed south by a mile, so the described border never reaches the Tennessee River. The great bend of the Chattahoochee was surveyed as being located at Miller's Bend (now ]) and the line from Nickajack to Miller's Bend was surveyed in 1826, but Alabama didn't accept this survey until January 24, 1840.{{sfn|Van Zandt|1976|p=103}}
The state constitution does not provide any remedy in the event the lieutenant governor's office becomes vacant.<ref name= moody/> In such an instance, their role as the presiding officer of the State Senate is assumed by the Senate president pro tempore.<ref>{{cite news| last = Lockette| first = Tim| title = Governor resigns amid affair scandal, pleads to two charges| newspaper = The Anniston Star| pages = 1A, | date = April 11, 2017| url = https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-anniston-star/128023947/}}</ref>


The southern boundary of Tennessee was inherited from North Carolina, and was defined in the 1776 North Carolina constitution as the ]. However, this was not surveyed until the early 19th century. In October 1807, this line was surveyed from a point near ], just east of the ], eastward to the old Cherokee line, about 30 miles. In 1817, the line was extended west to the Tennessee River, and between 1822 and 1839 the line was run east to Georgia.{{sfn|Van Zandt|1976|p=109}}
==List==


==foo==
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
* {{cite book |author=Van Zandt, Franklin K. |year=1976 |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_skxAAAAAIAAJ |title=Boundaries of the United States and the Several States: With Miscellaneous Geographic Information Concerning Areas, Altitudes, and Geographic Centers |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=] |oclc=69426475}}
|+ Lieutenant governors of the State of Alabama
!scope="col" data-sort-type="number"|{{abbr|No.|Number}}
!scope="colgroup" colspan="3"|Lieutenant Governor
!scope="col"|Term in office
!scope="col"|Party
!scope="col"|Election
!scope="colgroup" colspan=2|]{{efn|Lieutenant governors represented the same party as their governor unless noted.}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|1
|data-sort-value="Applegate, Andrew"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|&nbsp;
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1833–1870)}}
|{{dts|July 13, 1868}}<br>&ndash;<br>August 21, 1870<br>{{small|(died in office)}}
|]
|rowspan="2"|]
|rowspan="2" style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|&nbsp;
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|William Hugh|Smith}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="3" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Vacant''
|''{{dts|August 21, 1870}}<br>&ndash;<br>November 26, 1870''
|&mdash;
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|2
|data-sort-value="Moren, Edward"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1825–1886)}}
|{{dts|November 26, 1870}}<br>&ndash;<br>November 17, 1872<br>{{small|(lost election)}}
|]
|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|Robert B.|Lindsay}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|3
|data-sort-value="McKinstry, Alexander"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1822–1879)}}
|{{dts|November 17, 1872}}<br>&ndash;<br>November 24, 1874<br>{{small|(lost election)}}
|]
|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|David P.|Lewis}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|4
|data-sort-value="Ligon, Robert"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1823–1901)}}
|{{dts|November 24, 1874}}<br>&ndash;<br>November 28, 1876<br>{{small|(office abolished)}}
|]
|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|George S.|Houston}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="9" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Office did not exist from November 28, 1876, to January 19, 1903''
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|5
|data-sort-value="Cunningham, Russell"|]
|rowspan="9" style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1855–1921)}}
|{{dts|January 19, 1903}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 14, 1907<br>{{small|(lost nomination<br />for governor)}}
|]
|]<br>{{efn|Cunningham acted as governor from April 25, 1904, to March 5, 1905, while Jelks was absent from the state.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.archives.state.al.us/govs_list/g_cunnin.html | title=Russell Cunningham | publisher=] | access-date=November 25, 2018}}</ref>}}
|rowspan="23" style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|William D.|Jelks}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|6
|data-sort-value="Gray, Henry"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1867–1919)}}
|{{dts|January 14, 1907}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 1911<br>{{small|(did not run)}}
|]
|]
|{{sortname|B. B.|Comer}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|7
|data-sort-value="Seed, Walter"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1864–1959)}}
|{{dts|January 17, 1911}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 18, 1915<br>{{small|(lost nomination<br />for governor)}}
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Emmet|O'Neal}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|8
|data-sort-value="Kilby, Thomas"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1865–1943)}}
|{{dts|January 18, 1915}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 20, 1919
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Charles|Henderson|dab=Alabama politician}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|9
|data-sort-value="Miller, Nathan"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1866–1933)}}
|{{dts|January 20, 1919}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 15, 1923
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Thomas|Kilby}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|10
|data-sort-value="McDowell, Charles"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1871–1943)}}
|{{dts|January 15, 1923}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 1927
|]
|]<br>{{efn|McDowell acted as governor from July 10, 1924, to July 11, 1924, while Brandon was absent from the state.<ref name="adah" />}}
|{{sortname|William W.|Brandon}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|11
|data-sort-value="Davis, William"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1867–1934)}}
|{{dts|January 17, 1927}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 19, 1931
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Bibb|Graves}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|12
|data-sort-value="Merrill, Hugh"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1877–1954)}}
|{{dts|January 19, 1931}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 14, 1935
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Benjamin M.|Miller}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|13
|data-sort-value="Knight, Thomas"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1898–1937)}}
|{{dts|January 14, 1935}}<br>&ndash;<br>May 17, 1937
|]
|rowspan="2"|]<br>{{efn|Knight died in office; the office remained vacant for the remainder of the term.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.archives.state.al.us/conoff/Knight.html | title=Thomas E. Knight, Jr. | publisher=] | access-date=November 25, 2018}}</ref>}}
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|Bibb|Graves}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="3" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Vacant''
|''{{dts|May 17, 1937}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 1939''
|&mdash;
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|14
|data-sort-value="Carmichael, Albert"|]
|rowspan="8" style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1895–1952)}}
|{{dts|January 17, 1939}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 19, 1943
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Frank M.|Dixon}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|15
|data-sort-value="Ellis, Leven"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1881–1968)}}
|{{dts|January 19, 1943}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 20, 1947
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Chauncey|Sparks}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|16
|data-sort-value="Inzer, James"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1887–1967)}}
|{{dts|January 20, 1947}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 15, 1951
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Jim|Folsom}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|17
|data-sort-value="Allen, James"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1912–1978)}}
|{{dts|January 15, 1951}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 1955
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Gordon|Persons}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|18
|data-sort-value="Hardwick, William"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1910–1993)}}
|{{dts|January 17, 1955}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 19, 1959
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Jim|Folsom}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|19
|data-sort-value="Boutwell, Albert"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1904–1978)}}
|{{dts|January 19, 1959}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 14, 1963
|]
|]
|{{sortname|John Malcolm|Patterson}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|20
|data-sort-value="Allen, James"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1912–1978)}}
|{{dts|January 14, 1963}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 16, 1967
|]
|]
|{{sortname|George|Wallace}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|21
|data-sort-value="Brewer, Albert"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1928–2017)}}
|{{dts|January 16, 1967}}<br>&ndash;<br>May 7, 1968
|]
|rowspan="2"|]<br>{{efn|Brewer was acting governor on July 25, 1967, when Wallace had been absent from the state for 20 days; she returned to the state later that day.<ref name="adah" /><ref>{{cite book | last=Owen | first=Thomas McAdory | publisher=] | year=1979 | title=Alabama Official and Statistical Register | page=17 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lrIuAAAAIAAJ&q=brewer | access-date=September 28, 2008}}</ref> Wallace later died in office, and Brewer succeeded her,<ref name="adah" /> rendering the office vacant for the remainder of the term.}}
|{{sortname|Lurleen|Wallace}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="3" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Vacant''
|''{{dts|May 7, 1968}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 18, 1971''
|&mdash;
|{{sortname|Albert|Brewer}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!rowspan="2" scope="rowgroup"|22
|rowspan="2" data-sort-value="Beasley, Jere"|]
|rowspan="6" style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|rowspan="2"|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1935)}}
|rowspan="2"|{{dts|January 18, 1971}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 15, 1979
|rowspan="2"|]
|]<br>{{efn|Beasley acted as governor from June 5, 1972, to July 7, 1972, while Wallace was absent from the state.<ref name="adah" />}}
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|George|Wallace}}
|- style="height:2em;"
|]
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|23
|data-sort-value="McMillan, George"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1943)}}
|{{dts|January 16, 1979}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 1983
|]
|]
|{{sortname|Fob|James}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|24
|data-sort-value="Baxley, Bill"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1941)}}
|{{dts|January 17, 1983}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 18, 1987
|]
|]
|{{sortname|George|Wallace}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!rowspan="2" scope="rowgroup"|25
|rowspan="2" data-sort-value="Folsom, Jim 2"|]
|rowspan="2"|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1949)}}
|rowspan="2"|{{dts|January 18, 1987}}<br>&ndash;<br>April 22, 1993
|rowspan="2"|]
|]
|rowspan="2" style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|H. Guy|Hunt}}{{efn|name=gov-rep|Represented the ].}}
|- style="height:2em;"
|rowspan="2"|]<br>{{efn|Hunt was removed from office<ref>{{cite news|last=Nossiter|first=Adam|title=Ex-Gov. Hunt of Alabama Cleared by Pardon Board|work=]|page=18|date=12 June 1997|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/12/us/ex-gov-hunt-of-alabama-cleared-by-pardon-board.html| access-date=September 28, 2008}}</ref> and Folsom succeeded him,<ref name="adah" /> rendering the office vacant for the remainder of the term.}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="3" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Vacant''
|''{{dts|April 22, 1993}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 16, 1995''
|&mdash;
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|Jim|Folsom Jr.}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|26
|data-sort-value="Siegelman, Don"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1946)}}
|{{dts|January 16, 1995}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 18, 1999
|]
|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|Fob|James}}{{efn|name=gov-rep}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|27
|data-sort-value="Windom, Steve"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1949)}}
|{{dts|January 18, 1999}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 20, 2003
|]
|]
|style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|{{sortname|Don|Siegelman}}{{efn|name=gov-dem|Represented the ].}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|28
|data-sort-value="Baxley, Lucy"|]
|rowspan="2" style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|(1937–2016)}}
|{{dts|January 20, 2003}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 15, 2007
|]
|]
|rowspan="6" style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|Bob|Riley}}{{efn|name=gov-rep}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|29
|data-sort-value="Folsom, Jim 2"|]
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1949)}}
|{{dts|January 15, 2007}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 17, 2011
|]
|]
|- style="height:2em;"
!rowspan="2" scope="rowgroup"|30
|rowspan="2" data-sort-value="Ivey, Kay"|]
|rowspan="2" style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|rowspan="2"|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1944)}}
|rowspan="2"|{{dts|January 17, 2011}}<br>&ndash;<br>April 10, 2017
|rowspan="2"|]
|]
|rowspan="2"|{{sortname|Robert J.|Bentley}}
|- style="height:2em;"
|rowspan="2"|]<br>{{efn|Bentley resigned<ref>{{cite news|last=Blinder|first=Alan|title=Robert Bentley, Alabama Governor, Resigns Amid Scandal|work=]|date=10 April 2017|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/10/us/robert-bentley-alabama-governor.html| access-date=April 10, 2017}}</ref> and Ivey succeeded him, rendering the office vacant for the remainder of the term.}}{{efn|The vacancy ended on January 14, 2019 when ] took office.}}
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|—
|colspan="3" style="background:#EEEEEE;"|''Vacant''
|''{{dts|April 10, 2017}}<br>&ndash;<br>January 14, 2019''
|&mdash;
|rowspan=2 data-sort-value="Ivey, Kay"|]
|- style="height:2em;"
!scope="row"|31
|data-sort-value="Ainsworth, Will"|]
|style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}};"|
|''']'''<br>{{Small|({{Abbr|b.|born in}} 1981)}}
|{{dts|January 14, 2019}}<br>&ndash;<br>Incumbent
|]
|]<br>]
|}


==Notes== == notes ==
{{notelist}}


1819-03-02: Enabling Act for admission defined boundaries as above; sec 3 provided:
==References==
if the south line encroaches on Wayne, Green, or Jackson Counties in Mississippi, the line will be changed to a point 10 miles east of the mouth of the Pascagoula
;General
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite web | url=https://archives.alabama.gov/research/guidance/fast-facts/officials/lt-governor.aspx |title=Alabama Lieutenant Governors | publisher=Alabama Department of Archives & History| access-date=October 3, 2023}}
{{refend}}


1820-10-12: field notes filed for survey from bear creek to washington county
;Constitutions
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite web|url=http://alisondb.legislature.state.al.us/alison/codeofalabama/constitution/1901/toc.htm |title=Constitution of the State of Alabama |year=1901 |publisher=]}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/aliswww/history/constitutions/1875/1875.html | title=Constitution of the State of Alabama | year=1875 | publisher=]}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/aliswww/history/constitutions/1868/1868.html | title=Constitution of the State of Alabama | year=1868 | publisher=]}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/aliswww/history/constitutions/1865/1865.html | title=Constitution of the State of Alabama | year=1865 | publisher=]}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/aliswww/history/constitutions/1861/1861.html | title=Constitution of the State of Alabama | year=1861 | publisher=]}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/aliswww/history/constitutions/1819/1819.html | title=Constitution of the State of Alabama | year=1819 | publisher=]}}
{{refend}}


1820-07-19: demarcation of new line from washington county to gulf
;Specific
{{Reflist}}


1822-1839: 1817-? border run east as far as georgia
{{AlabamaLtGovernors}}
{{Lists of lieutenant governors by U.S. state}}
{{Current U.S. Lieutenant Governors}}
{{Alabama}}
{{Alabama statewide elected officials}}


1831: 4 Stat L. 479 defined AL-FL border was 31 N
]

]
1847: AL-FL line described as Ellicott's Line:
]
beginning on the Chattahoochee near "Irwin's Mills"
West to the Perdido

1853: Ellicott's Line resurveyed

1906: AL-MS boundary described as:
West bank of tennessee, six four-pole chains south of and above the mouth of yellow creek
Up that to the mouth of Bear Creek
Line to what was formerly the NW corner of Washington County
Line to a point 10 miles east of the mouth of the Pascagoula

1911: Ellicott's Line resurveyed

1954-05-06: AL and FL defined boundary at mouth of perdido and extend it into the gulf

Check code of alabama "1876, p. 189" for GA border, see vz 104

Latest revision as of 19:34, 2 November 2024

History of the borders of Alabama

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Alabama Territory was organized from the eastern half of Mississippi Territory on March 3, 1817. The act defined its borders as:

...beginning at the point where the line of the thirty-first degree of north latitude intersects the Perdido river, thence east to the western boundary line of the state of Georgia, thence along said line to the southern boundary line to the state of Tennessee, thence west along said boundary line to the Tennessee river, thence up the same to the mouth of Bear creek, thence by a direct line to the north-west corner of Washington county, thence due south to the Gulf of Mexico, thence eastwardly, including all the islands within six leagues of the shore, to the Perdido river, and thence up the same to the beginning...

The border between Georgia and Spanish Florida along the 31st parallel north was surveyed in 1799 by Andrew Ellicott, and this line was inherited by Alabama Territory.

The western boundary of Georgia was defined in 1802 as:

... a line beginning on the western bank of the Chatahouchie River where the same crosses the boundary line between the United States and Spain; running thence up the said River Chatahouchie, and along the western bank thereof to the great bend thereof, next above the place where a certain creek or river, called "Uchee" (being the first considerable stream on the western side, above the Cussetas and Coweta towns), empties into the Chatahouchie River; thence in a direct line to Nickajack, on Tennessee River; thence crossing the said last-mentioned river, and thence running up the said Tennessee River and along the western bank thereof to the southern boundary line of the State of Tennessee.

The location of Nickajack was surveyed in 1818, with the report being filed on July 13, and it being approved on December 18, though it is an open question whether that law was sufficient.. While the southern boundary of Tennessee was intended to be the 35th parallel north, the line was incorrectly surveyed south by a mile, so the described border never reaches the Tennessee River. The great bend of the Chattahoochee was surveyed as being located at Miller's Bend (now West Point) and the line from Nickajack to Miller's Bend was surveyed in 1826, but Alabama didn't accept this survey until January 24, 1840.

The southern boundary of Tennessee was inherited from North Carolina, and was defined in the 1776 North Carolina constitution as the 35th parallel north. However, this was not surveyed until the early 19th century. In October 1807, this line was surveyed from a point near 87th meridian west, just east of the Elk River, eastward to the old Cherokee line, about 30 miles. In 1817, the line was extended west to the Tennessee River, and between 1822 and 1839 the line was run east to Georgia.

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notes

1819-03-02: Enabling Act for admission defined boundaries as above; sec 3 provided: if the south line encroaches on Wayne, Green, or Jackson Counties in Mississippi, the line will be changed to a point 10 miles east of the mouth of the Pascagoula

1820-10-12: field notes filed for survey from bear creek to washington county

1820-07-19: demarcation of new line from washington county to gulf

1822-1839: 1817-? border run east as far as georgia

1831: 4 Stat L. 479 defined AL-FL border was 31 N

1847: AL-FL line described as Ellicott's Line: beginning on the Chattahoochee near "Irwin's Mills" West to the Perdido

1853: Ellicott's Line resurveyed

1906: AL-MS boundary described as: West bank of tennessee, six four-pole chains south of and above the mouth of yellow creek Up that to the mouth of Bear Creek Line to what was formerly the NW corner of Washington County Line to a point 10 miles east of the mouth of the Pascagoula

1911: Ellicott's Line resurveyed

1954-05-06: AL and FL defined boundary at mouth of perdido and extend it into the gulf

Check code of alabama "1876, p. 189" for GA border, see vz 104

  1. Stat. 371
  2. Van Zandt 1976, pp. 108–109. sfn error: no target: CITEREFVan_Zandt1976 (help)
  3. https://dlg.usg.edu/record/dlg_zlna_tcc775?canvas=0&x=400&y=400&w=1164
  4. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40577307?searchText=georgia+tennessee+line&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Dgeorgia%2Btennessee%2Bline%26so%3Drel&ab_segments=0%2Fbasic_search_gsv2%2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3A192d121bc98e4e65840ae02d9d42c549&seq=10 page 278
  5. Van Zandt 1976, p. 103. sfn error: no target: CITEREFVan_Zandt1976 (help)
  6. Van Zandt 1976, p. 109. sfn error: no target: CITEREFVan_Zandt1976 (help)