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==History== {{unreferenced section|date=October 2021}} The area of today's Washington County was long inhabited by various [[Indigenous peoples of North America|indigenous]] people. In historic times, European traders encountered first [[Choctaw]], whose territory extended through most of present-day Mississippi, and later [[Creek Indians]], who had moved southwest from [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] ahead of early [[European colonization of North America|European settlers]] who were encroaching on their land. Washington County was organized on June 4, 1800, from the [[Tombigbee District]] of the [[Mississippi Territory]] by proclamation of territorial governor [[Winthrop Sargent]]. It was the first county organized in what would later become Alabama, as settlers moved westward after the [[American Revolutionary War]]. Washington County is the site of [[St. Stephens, Alabama|St. Stephens]], the first territorial capital of Alabama. In 1807 former U.S. Vice President [[Aaron Burr]] was arrested at [[Wakefield, Alabama|Wakefield]] in Washington County, during his flight from being prosecuted for alleged treason (of which he was eventually found innocent). In the 1830s, the U.S. government [[Indian removal|removed]] most of the Choctaw and Creek to [[Indian Territory]] (now Oklahoma) west of the Mississippi River. Some members of these tribes stayed behind on their traditional lands in southwest Alabama, taking refuge in the forests and swamps. They were nominally considered state (and U.S.) citizens, but suffered severe racial discrimination. In the 19th century, the county was largely developed for [[cotton]] [[plantations in the American South|plantation]]s, with labor supplied by thousands of [[Slavery in the United States|enslaved African Americans]]. Many had been transported by slave traders to the [[Deep South]] in a forced migration in the early part of the century, as the land was being developed. During the [[American Civil War]], more than three quarters of the adult white men in the county were serving in the [[Confederate Army]] by 1863. In that year, a group of children petitioned the [[Confederate States of America|Confederate government]] to avoid drafting more white men, so they might serve as a home guard [[militia]]. The petition claimed the militia was needed to guard against a potential slave uprising, since there were numerous cotton plantations with large numbers of enslaved African Americans. No such uprising occurred. While the county continued to rely on agriculture into the 20th century, the infestation of the [[boll weevil]] destroyed many cotton crops. Mechanization and industrial-scale agriculture reduced the need for labor. Thousands of African Americans left the South in the [[Great Migration (African American)|Great Migration]] to Northern and Midwestern industrial cities, where they could get better jobs and escape the legal [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregation]] and violence of the South. In the early 20th century industrialists began to harvest and process the pine and other timber in this area of the state. The Choctaw and Creek Native Americans struggled to maintain their traditional culture, in the face of years during which the state government imposed a binary system of dividing people into white and "all other" [[people of color]] (blacks and Indians). Records no longer recognized their identifying as Choctaw, particularly in the period of [[Jim Crow]] after the Reconstruction era. It was not until the 1930s that the Choctaw were able to get Indian schools to support their culture in Mobile and Washington counties, where their people have been concentrated. For a time they were called [[Cajun]], but have no connection to such descendants of [[Acadians]], based largely in Louisiana. The people pressed to gain recognition for their own ethnicity. In 1979 the Alabama legislature officially recognized the [[MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians]]. In 1984 it passed legislation to establish a commission to represent Native American interests in the state; through that, a total of nine tribes have received state recognition. While the timber industry continued to be important to the economy, the county has gradually developed other businesses and industries, particularly petrochemical. Due to damage from [[Hurricane Frederic]] in 1979, the county was declared a disaster area that September.
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