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Cities Near Albertville, AL

$84,900 View on Map
GJP5037
274 Beulah Cut Off Rd
Albertville, AL (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1800 sq.ft.
$105,000 View on Map
JDW9008
38 Land Cir
Albertville, AL (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1200 sq.ft.
$129,900 View on Map
MAA3892
491 Corbinville Rd
Albertville, AL (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1440 sq.ft.
$190,000 View on Map
PBP2943
3410 Turnpike Rd
Albertville, AL (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2370 sq.ft.
$215,000 View on Map
TPT6009 7 Photos
251 Berkshire Ln
Albertville, AL (in city)
4 Bed, 3+ Bath Home
2500 sq.ft.
                &nbs …more»
$129,900 View on Map
JDP2307
2125 College Ave
Boaz, AL (4.4 miles)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
1978 sq.ft.
$42,000 View on Map
TWD4879
38 Brooks Dr
Boaz, AL (5.0 miles)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Home
800 sq.ft.
$995,000 View on Map
DAD6979 10 Photos
5830 Wyeth Mountain Rd
Guntersville, AL (5.8 miles)
5 Bed, 4+ Bath Home
6200 sq.ft.
$139,000 View on Map
JPJ1119
287 Kelley Ln
Guntersville, AL (6.8 miles)
3 Bed, 3 Bath Home
1900 sq.ft.
$25,000 View on Map
DAG1148
Lots 9 And 10 Pond Road
Guntersville, AL (7.3 miles)
Vacant Lot or Land
 

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Local city information for Albertville, AL

Albertville is a city in Marshall County, Alabama, United States, and is included in the Huntsville-Decatur Combined Statistical Area. As of the 2000 census, the population of the city is 17,247. According to the 2005 U.S. Census estimates, the city had a population of 18,615.

The area which today includes Albertville was settled by the Cherokee Indians until their removal to Oklahoma in the 1830s. It was, however, near the territory of the Creek nation, and several major trails which afforded communication (or military action) between the two nations crossed the area. It is believed to have been crossed by Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto during his expeditions in 1540.

During the American Civil War, the area around Albertville was the scene of several mid-level clashes between Union and Confederate forces.

The first white settlement in what is today Albertville began in the 1850s, and the settlement was named for Thomas A. Albert, an early settler. The city was incorporated in 1891.

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At about 4:10 p.m. on April 24, 1908, the city was virtually wiped out by a tornado that became commonly called "The Great Cyclone," or "The Cyclone of 1908." The storm is believed to have killed 35 people across northeastern Alabama, including 15 in Albertville. Relief was largely delivered by railroad, particularly from the nearby city of Gadsden. Trains from Gadsden transported doctors, nurses, and the Queen City Guards, the Alabama militia company based in Gadsden. The commander of the latter, future Gadsden mayor and Col. R.A. Mitchell, reported in a dispatch to Governor B.B. Comer:

... The destruction of property here is, I think, unprecedented in the history of the state. I have never seen anything like it, so complete and absolute as to leave little of worth in the path of the storm through town. On viewing the wreckage, covering easily forty acres or more in the heart of town, it appears incredible that any living being could have escaped the fury of the storm and death ...


Earlier, in 1893, the Alabama Legislature passed an act for the erection of an agricultural college in each of the state's Congressional districts. After some competition, Albertville was awarded the school for the Seventh District. This is the school that evolved into today's Albertville High School, whose sports teams are still known as the "Aggies."

Before the New Deal, when the Tennessee Valley Authority built Guntersville Dam, flooding on the Tennessee River would frequently leave the county courthouse in Guntersville inaccessible for residents of Albertville and other areas atop Sand Mountain. In 1919, the Alabama Legislature responded by requiring the erection of a courthouse at Albertville, in which cases arising in that part of the county would be heard.

When the 1992 Winter Olympics were held in Albertville, France, the citizens of its heteronymic counterpart in Alabama took full advantage of the opportunity to put their town on display. Mock winter games were held in this subtropical city, and one New Orleans radio station offered listeners a chance to win a trip to "the Albertville games" - those in Alabama.

In 2008, Alberville was featured in the A&E Television documentary "Meth Mountain," as part of the A&E Intervention In-Depth series. Among the featured Albertville residents was Dr. Mary Holley, an obstetrician whose meth-addicted brother committed suicide, and who now leads a local anti-meth group.

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