See also the history of Tuscaloosa, Alabama Early settlement The pace of white settlement in the Southeast increased greatly after the
War of 1812 and the
Treaty of Fort Jackson and the subsequent availability of land previously settled by Native Americans. A small assortment of log cabins soon arose near the large
Creek village at the fall line of the river, which the new settlers named in honor of the sixteenth-century
Chief Tuskaloosa. of a
Muskogean-speaking tribe and paramount chief of the
Mississippian culture. To form the word, they combined the Choctaw words "tushka" or "tashka" ("warrior") and "lusa" ("black"). In 1817,
Alabama became a
territory. Tuscaloosa County was established on February 6, 1818. On December 13, 1819, the territorial legislature incorporated the town of Tuskaloosa- now Tuscaloosa - one day before
Congress admitted Alabama the
Union as a
state. From 1826 to 1846, Tuskaloosa was the
capital of Alabama. The State House was built at the corner of 6th Street and 28th Avenue (now the site of Capitol Park). In 1831, the
University of Alabama was established.
Civil War and Reconstruction During the antebellum years, the principal crop was cotton, cultivated and processed by African-American slaves. By 1860, shortly before Alabama's
secession from the Union, the county had a total of 12,971 whites, 84 "free" African Americans, and 10,145 African-American slaves; the latter comprised 43.7 percent of the total population. The
Civil War brought significant changes, including migration out of the county by some African Americans. In the 1890s the construction of a system of locks and dams on the Black Warrior River by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers improved navigation to such an extent that Tuscaloosa was effectively connected to the Gulf Coast seaport of
Mobile. This stimulated the economy and trade, and mining and metallurgical industries were developed in the region. By the advent of the 20th century, the growth of the University of Alabama and the mental health-care facilities in the city, along with a strong national economy, fueled a steady growth in Tuscaloosa which continued unabated for 100 years. In 1901, the state legislature passed a constitution that
disenfranchised most African Americans and tens of thousands of poor whites and followed with
Jim Crow laws enforcing racial segregation. Due to this oppression and problems of continued violence by
lynchings, many African Americans left Alabama in two waves of the
Great Migration in the first half of the 20th century. They went to Northern and Midwestern industrial cities. Their mass departure from Tuscaloosa County is reflected in the lower rates of county population growth from 1910 to 1930, and from 1950 to 1970. (see Census Table).
Civil Rights era Blacks by 1960 represented 28.7% of the county population, and they were still disenfranchised throughout the state. African Americans in Tuscaloosa were active in demonstrations and other civil rights activities throughout the 1960s, seeking
desegregation of public facilities, including the county courthouse. The university was at the center of significant moments in the civil rights movement, including the admission of
Autherine Lucy and the pro-segregation demonstration that followed as well as the
Stand in the Schoolhouse Door incident in which then-governor
George Wallace attempted to stop desegregation of the institution by denying entrance to two
African-American students. The late 20th century brought positive economic news when
Mercedes-Benz announced it would build its first U.S. assembly plant near
Vance. The facility opened in 1995 and began assembling the R-Class Grand Sport Tourer in 2005. From 2006 to 2015 it produced the
GL-Class vehicles; and since 1998 and 2015 respectively, has produced the
GLS-Class and
GLE-CLASS. The plant brought thousands of jobs to the area through its own direct hires as well as those of the many component suppliers it attracted.
2000 to Present On April 27, 2011, the city of Tuscaloosa was hit by a half-mile (800 m) wide
EF4 tornado, which was part of the
2011 Super Outbreak. It resulted in at least 44 deaths in the city, over 1000 injuries, and massive devastation. Officials at DCH Hospital (alone) in Tuscaloosa reported treating more than 1000 injured people in the first several days of the tornado aftermath. Mayor Maddox was quoted saying that "We have neighborhoods that have been basically removed from the map." On April 29, President Barack Obama, upon touring the tornado damage in Tuscaloosa, said "I have never seen devastation like this". In the decade since, more than $1 billion in public and private funding has assisted the community in recovery. Former Tuscaloosa City Council President told NPR in 2021, "Black, white, young and old come together and we worked through this thing and made Tuscaloosa what it is today." According to a police violence tracking website, police have killed directly or indirectly 18 people over the last 21 years in the county, half of them African American. ==Geography==