
- Founding Date: November 24, 1866
- Area: 611 square miles
- Population: 13,826 (2020 Census estimate)
- Major Waterways: Conecuh River
- County Seat: Luverne
- Largest City: Luverne
History

Major Cities and Demographics

Economy
The rugged terrain and infertile soil of Crenshaw County made large-scale farming impractical. As a result, early settlers focused their efforts on timbering in the piney woods of the county. In 1886, the Montgomery and Florida Railroad company began purchasing land in Crenshaw County for a right-of-way for a rail line to run from Sprague Junction in Montgomery County to Crenshaw County, allowing lumber mills to ship their products with greater ease.
Employment
According to 2020 Census estimates, the workforce in Crenshaw County was divided among the following industrial categories:
- Educational services, and health care and social assistance (20.1 percent)
- Manufacturing (16.4 percent)
- Retail trade (12.4 percent)
- Professional, scientific, management, and administrative and waste management services (8.7 percent)
- Construction (7.9 percent)
- Public administration (6.7 percent)
- Transportation and warehousing, and utilities (6.5 percent)
- Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and extractive (5.3 percent)
- Other services, except public administration (4.3 percent)
- Arts, entertainment, recreation, and accommodation and food services (4.2 percent)
- Finance and insurance, and real estate, rental, and leasing (4.0 percent)
- Wholesale trade (2.4 percent)
- Information (1.1 percent)
Education
The Crenshaw County School System oversees four schools.
Geography

The Conecuh River runs along the southern border of the county, and one of its largest tributaries, Patsaliga Creek runs through the northwestern portion of the county. The major transportation routes through Crenshaw are U.S 29 and U.S. 331, which run north-south through the center of the county.
Events and Places of Interest
Every fall the town of Luverne holds its annual "World's Largest Peanut Boil." The town also boasts an historic district featuring several Queen Anne- and Craftsmen-style homes, including the 1904 F. M. Douglass House, now the Camellia House bed and breakfast.
Additional Resources
Heritage of Crenshaw County, Alabama. Clanton, Ala.: Heritage Publishing Consultants, Inc., 2002.
Additional Resources
Heritage of Crenshaw County, Alabama. Clanton, Ala.: Heritage Publishing Consultants, Inc., 2002.