Explore Calhoun County, Alabama with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 13 cities and towns in Calhoun County below.
| County | Calhoun |
| State | Alabama (AL) |
| County Seat | Anniston |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 33.735316 |
| Longitude | -85.79586 |
| Cities & Towns | 13 |
| Area Codes | 251, 256, 334 |
Calhoun County unfurls across a varied Alabama landscape, its northern reaches defined by the broad, fertile plains of the Tennessee River Valley, a region where the soil, a rich ochre, seems to hold the accumulated sunlight of centuries. To the south, the terrain grows more undulating, transitioning through pine-scented uplands and the dense, humid embrace of bottomland hardwoods, a place where the air hangs thick with the scent of damp earth and decaying leaves. This southern expanse eventually gives way to the subtle, almost imperceptible westward reach of the Gulf Coastal Plain, though salt marsh, a true coastal feature, is not a prominent characteristic of this particular inland county. Neighboring counties, themselves defined by their own unique geographies, form its boundaries, creating a distinctive regional identity for Calhoun County, a place where the subtle shifts in elevation and vegetation mark the passage from one distinct territory to another.
The genesis of Calhoun County traces back to the early days of Alabama's statehood, a period of restless expansion and the establishment of new administrative centers. Formed from lands previously held by the Creek Nation, its organization in the mid-19th century marked a decisive step in the region's integration into the burgeoning American republic. The county seat, Anniston, owes its existence not to an ancient settlement but to the deliberate vision of industrialists who recognized the strategic advantages of its location. The arrival of the railroad, a powerful engine of change in the 19th century, was the true midwife to Anniston, transforming a sparsely populated area into a hub of manufacturing and commerce. This deliberate creation, rather than organic growth, imbues Anniston with a particular character, a sense of purpose etched into its early layout, a characteristic that still resonates in the measured pace of its streets today.
Calhoun County's economy, like its geography, is a blend of tradition and adaptation. Agriculture, particularly the cultivation of peaches and pecans, continues to color the rural landscape, the trees bearing their fruit in a seasonal rhythm that speaks of patience and earth-bound labor. The red-clay back roads, winding through groves and fields, offer a tactile connection to this agricultural heartland, their surfaces shimmering with a fine dust under the bright Alabama sun. Beyond the fields, manufacturing has long been a significant presence, a legacy that continues to shape the county's industrial character. The towns within Calhoun County, each with its own unique story and rhythm, collectively form the living embodiment of this place. From the quiet dignity of smaller communities to the more bustling energy of the county seat, a palpable sense of place pervades, a quiet assurance of identity that feels as enduring as the longleaf pines that stand sentinel against the sky.
This page provides an interactive map of Calhoun County, Alabama alongside links to detailed street maps for 13 cities and towns. The county seat is Anniston. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |