Named after Philadelphia-based banker
Stephen Girard, who had purchased much of the
Muscogee territory that would become Russell County, the town of Girard served as the county's first seat from 1832 to 1839. It was incorporated around 1833. Girard was the site of Fort Ingersoll, built during the
Creek War of 1836 to protect white interests in the area. The town saw much of the fighting in the 1865
Battle of Columbus, culminating in the burning of the Dillingham Street bridge by retreating Confederates, and the eventual capture of Columbus. After Alabama
prohibited alcohol sales in 1915, Girard became a center of
bootlegging. Even after prohibition had ended, Girard and Phenix City remained known for gambling and vice establishments, fueled by the growth of
Fort Benning across the river. In 1923, Girard merged with neighboring
Phenix City. In 1933, the boundary of Russell County was moved north to take in all of Phenix City that had previously been in
Lee County. ==Historic district==