Alamo is a town in Crockett County, Tennessee, United States. As of the 2020 census, Alamo had a population of 2,336. Alamo, located in the central part of West Tennessee, is the county seat of Crockett County.
History
Alamo was first founded as a trading post called Cageville by mercantile partners Isaac M. Johnson and Lycurgus Cage in 1846. The two were the first to do business in the town, engaging in general merchandising in 1847. Johnson became the town's first postmaster in 1848, and the town's first church, built by Methodists, was erected the following year. The name was changed to Alamo after the town became the county seat with the organization of Crockett County in late 1871—the act that formed Crockett County specified that its seat should bear that name, as the county had been formed to commemorate Davy Crockett's stand at the Alamo. The town was incorporated nearly fifty years later, in 1911.
Geography
Alamo is located at (35.784201, -89.115729). The town is situated northwest of Jackson at the intersection of State Route 54, State Route 221, and State Route 88. U.S. Route 412 passes just west of the town.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , all land.
Climate
Demographics
2020 census
{| class="wikitable"
|+Alamo racial composition
!Race
!Num.
!Perc.
|-
|White (non-Hispanic)
|1,515
|64.85%
|-
|Black or African American (non-Hispanic)
|361
|15.45%
|-
|Native American
|1
|0.04%
|-
|Asian
|2
|0.09%
|-
|Other/Mixed
|78
|3.34%
|-
|Hispanic or Latino
|379
|16.22%
|}
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 2,336 people, 835 households, and 505 families residing in the town.
2000 census
As of the census
