There is little that remains of the government buildings, businesses, and residences that once made up the first capital of
Alabama. Now a historical park, the few enduring ruins of old Cahaba greet visitors among what remains of the town's former landscape
of roses, flowering vines, lilies, chinaberry trees, and gracefully flowing Spanish moss. Located in Dallas County, where the ![]()
Today there is little visible evidence of this once bustling and significant city. The Alabama Historical Commission, the
caretaker for the Old Cahawba Archeological Site, is taking steps to preserve the site's few remaining structures and its
buried artifacts for future generations of Alabamians. Although its government buildings, businesses, and residences have
long since rotted and collapsed or have been sold for scrap, visitors can still see the few striking remains of once-great
houses, walk on the deserted streets, and peer into the remnants of slave cabins.
History of the Site
The remains of a large village occupied by mound builders of the Mississippian Period (100-1550 AD) lie underneath those of Alabama's first capital. These mound builders were culturally related to the inhabitants
of Bottle Creek, a major archeological site a few miles north of Mobile Bay. Although the Mississippian culture faded away, some of its members
were absorbed by four future nations of Alabama; the Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Cherokees. The name Cahaba, or Cahawba, comes from two Choctaw words meaning "water above." It is believed that a Choctaw town of considerable
size existed at the site in the early eighteenth century but was abandoned well before Alabama became a territory. With the
defeat of the Creeks in March 1814 at Horseshoe Bend, the lands in the Alabama and Cahaba River valleys were opened for white settlement.
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Not wishing to confront the governor, who had obtained the free land and held veto power, the Warrior-Tombigbee supporters waited for another opportunity to obtain
the site for Tuscaloosa. When the Constitutional Convention convened in Huntsville in the summer of 1819, Cahaba's ![]()
Land Rush
Despite the opposition to Cahaba as the site of the state capital, many veterans of General Andrew Jackson's campaign against the Creeks settled in the area, with the result that the land office in Milledgeville, Georgia, was relocated to Cahaba in 1819. Lots that had sold for $1.25 an acre were selling within weeks for between $60 and $70 an acre. By 1822, at least two prime lots in the center of town sold for more than $5,000. Early investors included many of Alabama's leading citizens, including Reuben Saffold, Samuel Dale, Jesse Beene, William Rufus King, Thomas Bibb, Israel Pickens, Gabriel Moore, Clement C. Clay, and Henry H. Hitchcock.
The new city in the wilderness grew rapidly with the erection of the capitol building by David and Nicholas Cocheron and the laying out of a street plan modeled after that in Philadelphia. No known picture exists of the capitol building, but it is believed to have been an imposing two-story structure topped by a copper dome that was undoubtedly an impressive site to those who settled in the area. As the capital, Cahaba became the focus of political and social life in Alabama. This bustling new metropolis on the banks of the Alabama River soon boasted numerous stores, a state bank, several hotels, two ferries, several physicians, eight lawyers, and two newspapers. By 1821, Cahaba had about 1,000 inhabitants, compared with only 600 in Montgomery, and two of the state's first steamboats, the Tensas and the Harriet, were navigating the Alabama River up to and beyond Cahaba, signaling the importance of river transportation to the town's future.
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Capital Relocation
Soon after Lafayette's memorable visit, the Alabama General Assembly convened for its 1825 session that would decide Cahaba's
fate as the state's permanent capital. By then, Cahaba had lost it most ardent supporter in Governor Bibb, who had died in
1820 from injuries suffered when he fell from his horse. The showdown over the capital was nevertheless still close, but the
Tuscaloosa advocates, citing frequent flooding and health concerns, were able to pass a bill ordering the removal of the capital
to Tuscaloosa, effective February 1, 1826. Although many citizens left Cahaba as a result of the loss of the capital, the
town struggled for a while but did not completely die.
As the rich soil of the surrounding Black Belt began to attract wealthy cotton planters to the area and as river traffic continued to increase, Cahaba rebounded in the
1840s and 1850s as a bustling center of commerce. During this time, Dallas County was the wealthiest county in the state,
as reflected in Cahaba by the construction of many magnificent homes, a renowned school for women, and Saltmarsh Hall, the
site of frequent balls and social festivities. The advent of the Civil War, however, put the death knell to Cahaba's future,
as the town lost its railroad terminus and, in 1866, its status as the county seat, to Selma. Cahaba then literally began closing up, and its population
dwindled to about 300 by 1870. Those remaining were primarily former slaves, many of whom attended political meetings in the
old courthouse, earning Cahaba the ![]()
Old Cahaba Archaeological Site
In the early twentieth century, Cahaba became an important destination for various archaeological and historical societies.
In 1926 the Cahaba Memorial Association sponsored riverboat pilgrimages to promote preservation of the site's cemeteries,
ruins, and remaining structures. By 1943, the state had created the Cahaba Historical Commission to manage preservation projects
at the site. However, lacking condemnation authority or regular state funding, the commission was unable to prevent the increasing
loss of structures to vandals and the elements. In 1975, the authority over the site finally was transferred officially to
the Alabama Historical Commission, which now maintains the site as the Old Cahawba Archaeological Site. The park includes
a welcome center and education room, picnic area, hiking trails, interpretive signs, and a nature trail. Today, visitors may
observe old artesian wells, collapsed cellars, chimney ruins, old cemeteries, and slave quarters. Also remaining is the foundation
of the Cahaba Federal Prison, where more than 3,000 Union soldiers were imprisoned during the Civil War, and the Cocheron
columns, today's most recognizable symbol of Cahaba's long-decayed fine mansions and glorious past. Most importantly, visitors
may walk where Cahaba's old avenues and streets were once bustling with excitement and imagine life in this once proud frontier
capital of Alabama.
Additional Resources
Abernathy, Thomas Perkins. The Format ive Period of Alabama, 1815-1828. 1922. Reprint, Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1965.
Brantley Jr., William H. Three Capitals: A Book about the First Three Capitals of Alabama: St. Stephens, Huntsville & Cahaba, 1818-1826. 1912. Reprint, Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1976.
Hobbs, Sam Earle. "History of Early Cahaba: Alabama's First Capital." Alabama Historical Quarterly 31 (Fall and Winter 1969): 155.
Keith, Todd. Old Cahawba. Brierfield, Ala.: Cahaba Trace Commission, 2003.
Neville, Bert. A Glance at Old Cahawba, Alabama's First Capital. Selma, Ala.: Coffee Printing Co., 1961.
Herbert J. "Jim" Lewis
Birmingham, Alabama
Published May 20, 2008
Last updated September 23, 2009