Ashville is one of two county seats in St. Clair County, the other being Pell City; it is located in north-central Alabama. It has a mayor/city council form of government.
History

In 1890, a group of investors, the Ashville Railroad Company, built a railroad line from Ashville to Whitney, connecting to the Alabama Great Southern Railroad. However, the group went bankrupt during the mid-1890s, and the tracks were dismantled and sold for scrap. Electric lights came to Ashville in 1891, and the first telephone company was chartered in the same year. Residents in the southern half of the county often complained of the difficulty of traveling to Ashville over Backbone Mountain, which divides the county, so in 1902 a satellite county seat was established in Pell City on the southern side of the mountain.
Demographics
According to the 2016 Census estimates, Ashville's population was 2,490. Of that number, 62.5 percent of respondents identified themselves as white, 32.4 percent as African American, 3.4 percent as two or more races, 1.7 percent as Asian, and 1.6 percent as Hispanic. The city's median household income was $49,917 and the per capita income was $15,843.
Employment
According to 2016 Census estimates, the workforce in Ashville was divided among the following industrial categories:
- Educational services, and health care and social assistance (17.8 percent)
- Construction (15.3 percent)
- Retail trade (11.3 percent)
- Manufacturing (10.0 percent)
- Arts, entertainment, recreation, and accommodation and food services (9.6 percent)
- Public administration (7.7 percent)
- Other services, except public administration (6.4 percent)
- Transportation and warehousing and utilities (5.6 percent)
- Wholesale trade (5.4 percent)
- Professional, scientific, management, and administrative and waste management services (4.7 percent)
- Information (2.5 percent)
- Finance, insurance, and real estate, rental, and leasing (2.2 percent)
- Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and extractive (1.5 percent)
Education
Schools in Ashville are part of the St. Clair County School District; the city has five public schools (elementary, middle, high, vocational, and an alternative school). It also has one private school serving K-12.
Transportation
Ashville is intersected by U.S. Highways 231 and 411 and is located only about 2 miles south of Interstate 59. It also is served by the Dugger's Field Airport and the Golden Pond Airport.
Events and Places of Interest

The Old Ashville Masonic Lodge and Mattie Lou Teague Crow Museum is located in the town's historic district and features artifacts dealing with the history of St. Clair County. The John W. Inzer Museum, originally the home of Confederate officer and district judge John Inzer, is a Greek revival home built in 1852 that houses Inzer's papers and memorabilia.
Additional Resources
Crow, Mattie Lou Teague. History of St. Clair County (Alabama). Huntsville, Ala.: Strode Publishers, 1973.
Additional Resources
Crow, Mattie Lou Teague. History of St. Clair County (Alabama). Huntsville, Ala.: Strode Publishers, 1973.
The Heritage of St. Clair County, Alabama. Clanton, Ala.: Heritage Publishing Consultants, 1998.