According to
legend, Delmar was not always the sleepy little community it is today. During the
coal mining boom of the 19th century, there were several
saloons in Delmar. Reportedly, Delmar was as lively as a town out of the
Wild West, complete with drunken bar room brawls.
Byler Road was completed through Winston County in 1820. The historic highway, which ran through parts of what are today Delmar,
Natural Bridge,
Lynn, and
Haleyville, connected the towns of northern Alabama with
Tuscaloosa, which at the time was the
capital of Alabama. When Alabama
seceded from the
Union in 1861, the people of Winston County did not want to fight their Northern or Southern brothers and wanted to remain neutral in the
Civil War. They decided that if a
state could secede from the
nation, then a
county could secede from a state, and formed
"Free State of Winston." The people of neighboring counties called the people of Winston County
Tories (Northern sympathizers). During the closing phases of the
Civil War, Union troops made their way through Winston County on parts of what today are Winston County Road 17. Union troops set up their camps on the side of the road. Today, the road is better known as "
Yankee Trace Road." After the Civil War, a
rail line was built from
Sheffield, Alabama, to Delmar by the
Northern Alabama Railroad. After several years, a rail line was built from
Parrish, Alabama, to Delmar. This allowed rail service from Birmingham to the Shoals area. Today,
Norfolk Southern Railway still runs cargo trains through Delmar. ==20th century and recent history==