The Black Warrior River

Plied for thousands of years by Indians, then by early explorers and American settlers, this river extends 169 miles from the Sipsey and Mulberry Forks near Birmingham to its confluence with the Tombigbee at Demopolis. It drains 6228 square miles of one of the world's most ancient watersheds and has 130 species of fish and many rare plants and animals. Part of a navigable waterway system, this point is 339 river miles above Mobile. About 5 billion gallons of water flow past here each day. In the past it was designated as two rivers, the "Black Warrior" upstream and the "Warrior" downstream since Federal funds were appropriated on per river basis. In the Choctaw language "Tuscaloosa" means Black Warrior.

Marker can be reached from Greensboro Avenue north of 2nd Street (Jack Warner Parkway).

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB