Explore Sumter County, Alabama with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 9 cities and towns in Sumter County below.
| County | Sumter |
| State | Alabama (AL) |
| County Seat | Livingston |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 32.66748 |
| Longitude | -88.2408 |
| Cities & Towns | 9 |
| Area Codes | 205, 251, 256, 334, 938 |
Sumter County unfurls across southeastern Alabama, a landscape shaped by the slow, deliberate work of water and time. Its terrain is a study in subtle gradients, moving from the flatter, more fertile lands in the north, where the Tennessee River’s influence can still be felt in the rich soil, to the denser, more humid stretches of the south, where the air grows thick with the scent of pine and the distant whisper of salt marsh. Red-clay roads, often little more than deeply rutted tracks, crisscross the county, leading through stands of longleaf pine that cast long, cool shadows in the afternoon sun, and into the hushed, cathedral-like quiet of bottomland hardwood forests. The county shares its borders with a patchwork of its neighbors – Macon to the north, Russell and Barbour to the east, Coffee and Dale to the south, and Montgomery to the west – each contributing its own unique character to the regional weave, yet Sumter retains a distinct, almost introspective presence, a place where the humid Gulf air seems to hold its breath.
The story of Sumter County is etched into the very earth, a narrative of settlement that began in earnest during the early 19th century, following the Creek Cession of 1832. Pioneers, drawn by the promise of fertile land, pushed westward, establishing farms and communities that would form the bedrock of the county. The county itself was officially organized in 1832, a deliberate act of governance to impose order on this burgeoning frontier. A formative episode, like so many in the Deep South, was inextricably linked to the agricultural economy, particularly the cultivation of cotton, which shaped the lives and fortunes of its inhabitants for generations. The county seat, Livingston, emerged as a natural hub, its strategic location fostering its growth into a center of commerce and community, a place where decisions were made and news traveled, much like the slow spread of gossip through a sleepy neighborhood on a sweltering summer evening.
Today, Sumter County’s economy is a quiet hum, a testament to the enduring spirit of its people and the land they cultivate. Agriculture remains a cornerstone, with peaches and pecans ripening under the Alabama sun, their sweetness a subtle counterpoint to the earthy aroma of the red soil. Beyond the fields, a sense of place is defined by the enduring rhythm of its towns and the quiet dignity of its residents. Landmarks here are not grand monuments but rather the enduring presence of the land itself, the ancient oaks draped in Spanish moss, the slow-moving rivers, and the enduring memory of the civil rights struggle that has left its indelible mark on the region. The character of Sumter County is one of quiet resilience, a place where the light at dusk seems to linger a little longer, painting the sky in hues of rose and gold, and where the air itself feels heavy with the stories of those who came before.
This page provides an interactive map of Sumter County, Alabama alongside links to detailed street maps for 9 cities and towns. The county seat is Livingston. 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 |