Explore Lowndes County, Alabama with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 7 cities and towns in Lowndes County below.
| County | Lowndes |
| State | Alabama (AL) |
| County Seat | Hayneville |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 32.200605 |
| Longitude | -86.669608 |
| Cities & Towns | 7 |
| Area Codes | 251, 334 |
Lowndes County unfurls across the Alabama landscape like a map drawn in slow, deliberate strokes. Its terrain is a study in contrasts, marked by the fertile bottomlands that hug its waterways and the sandy loam of the pine hills that rise toward the north. The Alabama River, a broad, languid artery, forms its western boundary, a constant, shifting presence that whispers of distant shores. To the east, the land gradually ascends, transitioning into the longleaf pine ecosystems that once dominated this region, their scent a pervasive, resinous perfume on the humid air. This division creates distinct sub-regions: the riparian zones, rich with the dense, tangled growth of bottomland hardwoods, and the drier uplands, where the pines stand sentinel. Neighboring counties – Dallas to the north, Montgomery to the northeast, Bullock to the east, Pike to the southeast, and Crenshaw and Butler to the south – all share in this particular shade of Southern soil, yet Lowndes County holds its own unique character, a subtle alchemy of climate and geology.
The formative years of Lowndes County are etched into the very soil, a narrative of settlement and transformation. Established in 1832 from lands acquired through treaties with Native American tribes, it was quickly populated by planters drawn to the fertile lands. The county seat, Hayneville, emerged as a natural focal point, a place where the red-clay back roads converged and where the business of the burgeoning community could be conducted. Its growth was inextricably linked to the agricultural economy, particularly the cultivation of cotton, a crop that shaped the lives and fortunes of those who lived and worked here. The shadow of the Civil Rights Movement also falls long and deep across Lowndes County, a period of profound struggle and enduring courage that left an indelible mark on its history and its people.
The economy of Lowndes County, like much of the Black Belt, is deeply rooted in its agricultural heritage, with pecans and peaches still ripening under the generous Southern sun, though the land yields more than just fruit. The quality of light here, especially in the late afternoon, carries a certain weight, as if the very air itself is imbued with the slow passage of time, gilding the fields and softening the edges of the scattered towns. People here move with a deliberateness that seems to mirror the languid flow of the Alabama River. Landmarks are not always grand; sometimes they are the simple, enduring structures that speak of generations of labor and life. The county's character is one of quiet resilience, a place where the echoes of history are felt not in grand pronouncements but in the subtle textures of everyday existence. Within Lowndes County, the hamlets and villages, each with its own particular cadence, contribute to the larger, unhurried rhythm of the land.
This page provides an interactive map of Lowndes County, Alabama alongside links to detailed street maps for 7 cities and towns. The county seat is Hayneville. 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 |