- Perote, Alabama
Perote was a community in Bullock County,
Alabama ,United States .Text from historical marker
Obverse
Perote, Bullock County
This community, settled during the mid-1830s, was first called Fulford’s Cross Roads, then Missouri Cross Roads when a post office was established here in 1846. The name Perote, adopted in 1850, was suggested by veterans returning from the Mexican War (1846-48), who remembered a citadel in
Mexico by that name. Incorporation followed in1858 . Early settlers in the area, who came primarily from the Carolinas and Georgia, included the following families: Sellers, Crossley, Blue, Harp, Locke, Peach, Hixon, Culver, Johnson, Adair, Ardis, McCall, Rumph, Brabham, Miles, Cameron, Starke, Wilson, Walker and Ivey.Methodist andBaptist churches were among the first structures in the community, around which much of the social life centered, including “protracted meetings” – revivals.Reverse
Perote, Bullock County
Perote grew rapidly in the 1850s so that by 1860 the community was thriving with several doctors, stores, a carriage factory, a Masonic lodge, and a school. At the beginning of the War Between the States (1861-65), the school numbered about 150 students. Many of the young men from the school served in the
Perote Guards , organized in 1859 as war clouds gathered. They went off to war as part of the1st Alabama Infantry Regiment with uniforms and a flag handmade by the women they left behind.The community’s fortunes fell following the war ascotton cultivation, the area’s traditional leading economic pursuit, receded in importance. By-passed by therailroad and experiencing several disastrous fires, Perote suffered a steady decline in business activity and population.ee also
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Perote , Mexico, for which Perote, Alabama was namedReferences
* [http://www.archives.state.al.us/markers/ibullock.html Alabama State Archives]
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