Historical Markers in Barbour County, Alabama
Barbour County / Early Barbour County Commissioners
Barbour County High School
Barbour County's "Little Scotland"/Pea River Presbyterian Church
Batesville Church - 1837
Blue Springs School 1920-1969
Central Railroad of Georgia Freight Depot
Charles Samuel McDowell, Jr.
Chauncey Sparks
Chief Eufaula (Yoholo Micco)
Clio Heritage Mural
Comrades
Confederate Hospital
Cotton and Creek Country
Cowikee Cotton Mills
Creek Indian Removal
Dedicated to Memory of African Slaves
Election Riot of 1874
Eufaula
Eufaula First United Methodist Church
Eufaula-Montgomery Roadway
Fendall Hall / Young and Dent
Fire Bell
First Baptist Church of Eufaula
First Presbyterian Church
Fort Browder / 15th Alabama Infantry
Fort Browder / 15th Alabama Infantry
Freemount Junior High School
General Grierson’s March
George Corley Wallace, Lurleen Burns Wallace Governors of Alabama
Governors Park
Grace Episcopal Church
Hart House
History of Clayton, Alabama/Clayton’s Architectural Heritage
In Honor of All World War II Veterans
In Loving Memory of the Clayton Soldiers of the World War
Jere Locke Beasley
Louisville
Louisville and "Old Alabama"
Louisville World War II Memorial
Miller – Martin Townhouse
Octagon House
Old Fairview Cemetery
Old Negro Cemetery / Fairview Cemetery
Pea River Electric Membership Corporation
Pea River Presbyterian Church Cemetery
Providence Methodist Church & Schoolhouse
Ramah Baptist Church & Cemetery
Spring Hill United Methodist Church
The Battles of Hobdy's Bridge and Pea River
The City of Eufaula
The Creek Town of Eufaula
The Old County Court House
The Opening of the Second Phase of the Second Creek War
The Second Creek War in the Eufaula Area
The St. Julian Hotel
The Town of Irwinton
The Tree That Owns Itself
Union Baptist Church Cemetery
Veterans Memorial
Vietnam Veteran Park
White Oak United Methodist Church
William Dorsey Jelks Governor of Alabama
William Thomas "Tom" Mann / Eufaula, Alabama
World War I Doughboy