Near Pelham City Hall stands a historical marker that
includes the following text: “Near this site stood
Shelbyville, A.T., first county seat of Shelby County; named for Isaac Shelby,
governor of Tennessee. Shelby County was established February 7, 1818 by an act
of the Alabama Territorial Legislature.” Yes, the first seat of county government was
located where Pelham is now. And yes, the community and the county existed
before Alabama became a state.
Congress created the Alabama Territory in March
1817 from the eastern half of the Mississippi Territory, which dated from 1798.
In the 1810 census what became the “A.T.” seven years later had around 9, 000 people.
By 1820, just after Alabama was granted statehood in December 1819, the
population had swelled to almost 128,000. In 1826 a town on the other end of
the county, Columbia, was renamed Columbiana and has been the county seat ever
since. Shelbyville remained a tiny town for over 150 years even after changing
its name to Pelham in the 1870s.
As the marker also notes, an orphan’s court was
held in what is now Pelham just two months after the county was created. A private home served as the first courthouse. Even
in that sparsely populated frontier of the United States, some provisions had
to be made for orphans and their right to any family estate. An index for the
county’s orphan’s court book 1818-1836 is available online, and the book is
kept by the Shelby County Historical Society in Columbiana. This first court of
the county was later replaced by probate court.
The map below is a close-up portion of Fielding Lucas' 1822 map of Alabama that shows two towns in Shelby County at that time. The map can be seen at the Historical Maps of Alabama online resource.
The map below is a close-up portion of Fielding Lucas' 1822 map of Alabama that shows two towns in Shelby County at that time. The map can be seen at the Historical Maps of Alabama online resource.
A version of this post appeared in the winter 2015 issue of the Pelham City News.