Cambial County is the westernmost county of Escambia County Public Records the U.S. state of Florida. According to the 2010 census, the population was 297,619. The county seat is Pensacola. The area has been inhabited for thousands of years by indigenous peoples of different cultures. American Indian tribes of the historical era of European colonization were American Creek. Cambial County was created by Escambia County Public Records European Americans July 21, 1821. It was named for the Cambial River. The name Cambial may be derived from Creek Shamble name, which means Clearwater ,or the Choctaw word for reed or cane - brake.
Created on the same date, Cambial and SST. Johns had two original counties of Florida. The Suwannee River was the border between them, following a Escambia County Public Records winding road in the northern state border in the Gulf of Mexico. In essence, the Government of Cambial County had jurisdiction over the " enclave and Big Bend SST. Johns and the rest of all areas in the state. 21 counties were created from Cambial County , directly or indirectly. Include Jackson (1821), Sadden Escambia County Public Records ( created from Jackson) (1823) , Leon (1824), Walton (1824 ), Washington (created from Jackson and Walton) (1825), Hamilton (1827), Jefferson (1827), Madison (created from Jefferson) (1827), Franklin (1832), Calhoun (1838).
Santa Rosa (1842), Wakeful created from Leon (1843), Holmes (created from Jackson and Walton) (1848), Liberty (created from Sadden ) (1855), Lafayette and Taylor (established from Escambia County Public Records Madison) (1856), Bay (created from Washington ) (1913), Saloons (created from Santa Rosa and Walton) (1915), Dixie (created from Lafayette) (1921), and in the Gulf (created from Calhoun) ( 1925). The area where the county government would have jurisdiction decreased with the creation of many other Florida counties, Escambia County Public Records the number sixty-seven in 2013.
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