Town name | Other name | County | Established | Disestablished | Current status | Remarks |
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Aigleville[1] | | Marengo | 1818 | 1830s | Barren | Established by French Vine and Olive colonists |
Arcola[2] | Arcola Ferry | Hale | 1820s | 1850s | Historic | Established by French Vine and Olive colonists |
Bainbridge[3] | Bam Bridge, Bambridge | Colbert,Lauderdale | 1819 | 1840s | Submerged | Under Wilson Lake |
Barnesville[4] | | Marion | | | Historic | |
Battelle[4] | | DeKalb | | | Neglected | |
Beaver Mills[4] | Beaver Meadow | Mobile | | | Neglected | Site of a uniform depot during Civil War |
Bellefonte | | Jackson | 1821 | 1920s | Neglected | Former county seat of Jackson County |
Blakeley[4] | | Baldwin | 1813 | 1865 | Neglected | Former county seat of Baldwin County |
Blanche | | Cherokee | | | Barren | Site at intersection of State Route 35 and State Route 273 |
Bluff City[3] | Bluff, Monroe | Morgan | 1818 | 1881 | | |
Bluffton | | Cherokee | 1888 | 1934 | Barren | Former iron ore mining town |
Boston[4] | | Franklin | | | | |
Brownville | | Tuscaloosa | 1925 | Approx. 1989 | Abandoned / Demolished | Former company town for W.P. Brown and Sons Lumber Co., some plots still visible near intersection of Tabernacle Road and Brownville Pike Road in Northwestern Tuscaloosa County |
Cahaba[4][3] | | Dallas | 1819 | 1865 | Abandoned | First capital of Alabama, from 1820-1826 |
Cedric[4] | | Randolph | | | | Four miles southwest of Roanoke |
Centerdale[4] | | Morgan | | | | |
Chandler Springs[5] | | Talladega | 1832 | 1918 | Abandoned | Nationally famous resort town, from 1832-1918 |
Choctaw Corner | | Clarke | | | Barren | Area now part of Thomasville |
Chulafinnee Placers[3] | | Cleburne | 1835 | 1840s | | |
Claiborne[4][6] | | Monroe | 1816 | 1870s | Abandoned | One of the largest settlements in early Alabama |
Clarkesville[7] | Clarkeville | Clarke | 1819 | 1860s | Barren | First county seat of Clarke County |
Dumphries[3] | | Washington | 1819 | 1839 | | |
Erie[4][3] | | Hale | 1819 | 1855 | Barren | Former county seat of Hale County |
Failetown | | Clarke | | | | |
Finchburg[3] | Finchburgh, Finchberg | Monroe | | | | |
Fort Gaines[3] | | Mobile | | | Historic | Defensive fort on Mobile Bay. Now serves as a museum and tourist attraction on Dauphin Island. |
Fort McClellan | | Calhoun | 1912 | 1999 | Abandoned/Historic | Former army base outside of Anniston |
Fort Morgan[3] | | Baldwin | | | | Defensive fort on Mobile Bay |
Gantts Quarry | | Talladega | 1830 | 2000 | Abandoned | Former mining town |
Gold Log Mine[3] | | Talladega | | | | Former gold mining camp |
Houston[3] | | Winston | | | Historic | Former county seat of Winston County |
Kaulton | | Tuscaloosa | 1912 | | Barren | Former Kaul Lumber Company company town and mill site; now part of Tuscaloosa |
Louina[3] | | Randolph | 1834 | 1905 | | At one time the largest town in Randolph County |
Manasco[4] | | Walker | | | | |
Massillon[3] | | Dallas | | | | |
Minden | | Calhoun | | | |
Montezuma[3] | Covington Courthouse | Covington | | | | First county seat of Covington County |
Morgan Stream | | | | | | |
Mountain Mills | | Colbert | 1872 | 1893 | Barren | Former home of large cotton mill |
Nottingham[3] | Jones Camp Ground | Talladega | 1880s | 1895 | | Steel town |
Odena[3] | Shirtee Plantation, Odena Plantation, Oden's Mill | Talladega | | | Barren | |
Old Ramer[4] | | Montgomery | 1850 | 1895 | | |
Pansey[4] | | Houston | | | | |
Pikeville | | Marion | | | | First county seat of Marion County |
Prairie Bluff | Prairie Blue, Dale, Daletown | Wilcox | 1819 | 1870s | Submerged | Former Alabama River shipping port |
Riverton[4][8][9] | Point Smith 1846-1851, Chickasaw 1851-1890, Riverton 1890-1930s | Colbert | 1846 | 1930s | Submerged | Former Tennessee River port town, now underwater due to the construction of thePickwick Landing Dam. The only current remnant of Riverton is a cemetery located along the Rose Trail |
Rockcastle[3] | Davis Creek | Tuscaloosa | | | | |
St. Stephens[4] | | Washington | 1769 | | Historic | First territorial capital of Alabama |
Stanton[4] | | Chilton | | | | |
Tooktocaugee | | Calhoun | | | Barren | Former Creek Indian village |
Turkey Town | | Cherokee | 1770 | | Barren | Former Creek Indian village |
Valhermoso Springs[3] | Chunn Springs, Manning Springs, Valhermosa Springs, White Sulpher Springs | Morgan | | | | Former health resort |
Vienna[4] | | Pickens | | | | |
Waldo[3] | | Talladega | | | | |
Washington | | Autauga | 1817 | 1879 | Barren/Submerged | First county seat of Autauga County |