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Dale County Courthouse
Ozark, AL |
The
county seat and largest city is
Ozark.
Its name is in honor of General
Samuel Dale.
The area now known as
Dale County was originally inhabited by members of the
Creek Indian nation, who occupied all of
southeastern Alabama during this period. The county,
together with the surrounding area, was ceded to the
United States in the 1814
Treaty of Fort Jackson, ending the
Creek Indian Wars. A blockhouse had been constructed
during the conflict on the northwestern side of the
Choctawhatchee River, and the first non-Indian
residents of Dale County would be veterans who began to
settle in the area around 1820.
Dale
County was established on December 22, 1824. It
originally included the whole of what is now
Coffee County and
Geneva County, together with the "panhandle" portion
of
Houston County. The original county seat was located
at Dale's Court House (now the town of
Daleville), but when Coffee County split from Dale
in 1841, the seat was moved to
Newton. Here it remained until 1870 when, following
a courthouse fire in 1869 and the formation of Geneva
County (which took the southern third of Dale County),
the county seat was moved to the town of Ozark, where it
remains. In 1903 a small portion of the southeast part
of Dale county was joined to the newly formed Houston
County.
Portions of the
15th Regiment of Alabama Infantry, which served with
great distinction throughout the
U.S. Civil War, were recruited in Dale County, with
all of Co. "E" and part of Co. "H" being composed of
Dale County residents. This unit is most famous for
being the regiment that confronted the
20th Maine on the
Little Round Top during the
Battle of Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. Despite
several ferocious assaults, the 15th was ultimately
unable to dislodge the Union troops, and was ultimately
forced to retreat after a desperate bayonet charge led
by the 20th Maine's commander, Col.
Joshua L. Chamberlain. This assault was vividly
recreated in
Ronald F. Maxwell's 1993 film
Gettysburg. The 15th would continue to serve
until the final capitulation of Lee's army at
Appomattox Court House in 1865.
Another regiment
recruited largely from Dale County was the
33rd Alabama; Companies B, G and I were recruited in
the county, with Co. G coming from Daleville; Co. B from
Newton, Skipperville, Clopton, Echo and Barnes Cross
Roads; and Co. I from Newton, Haw Ridge, Rocky Head,
Westville and Ozark. This regiment fought with great
distinction in the
Army of Tennessee, mostly under famed General
Patrick Cleburne, once winning the
Thanks of the Confederate Congress for its action at
Ringgold Gap. The regiment was largely annihilated
during the battles of
Perryville and
Franklin, but a few men survived and returned to
Dale County after the war.
History provided
by:
http://en.wikipedia.org |