4 entries match your criteria.
Historical Markers in Hurtsboro, Alabama
Phenix City is the county seat for Russell County
Hurtsboro is in Russell County
Russell County (77) ►
ADJACENT TO RUSSELL COUNTY
Barbour County (71) ►
Bullock County (23) ►
Lee County (74) ►
Macon County (92) ►
Chattahoochee County, Georgia (19) ►
Muscogee County, Georgia (185) ►
Stewart County, Georgia (28) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
ADJACENT TO RUSSELL COUNTY
Barbour County (71) ►
Bullock County (23) ►
Lee County (74) ►
Macon County (92) ►
Chattahoochee County, Georgia (19) ►
Muscogee County, Georgia (185) ►
Stewart County, Georgia (28) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 ► Alabama, Russell County, Hurtsboro — Hurtsboro United Methodist Church — ![]() |
Originally built in 1865, the First Methodist Church in Hurtsboro, then called Hurtsville, was located in Olivet, about 4 miles south. The building burned and a wooden church was built on this site in 1876. It was replaced in 1906 by the present . . . — — Map (db m69417) HM |
2 ► Alabama, Russell County, Hurtsboro — Joel Hurt House — ![]() |
The home was built in 1857 by the founder of Hurtsboro, Joel Hurt, Sr. (1813-1861) and his wife, Lucy Long Hurt (1822-1915). Their saw mill, constructed near Hurtsboro Creek, provided lumber for the home and surrounding community. With the . . . — — Map (db m69415) HM |
3 ► Alabama, Russell County, Hurtsboro — Long Family — Nimrod Long House — ![]() |
Nimrod Washington Long moved to Alabama from Georgia in the 1830s. A planter, mill owner and state legislator, he had real estate and railroad interests in Russell County. This house was the plantation home of Nimrod Washington Long in Spring Hill, . . . — — Map (db m69433) HM |
4 ► Alabama, Russell County, Hurtsboro — May 28th Celebration Battle and Antioch Communities — Russell County, Alabama — ![]() |
President Abraham Lincoln issued Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, in the midst of the Civil War. Freedom for the South's slaves, however only came with the end of the conflict, April 1865. The joyous news reached Negro slaves in this area in . . . — — Map (db m162704) HM |