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Loachapoka was a Creek (people)Creek Indian town for some decades prior to white settlement. In the last census prior to the Trail of tearsNative removal to Oklahoma, Loachapoka was found to have a population of 564. Upon settlment, Loachapoka--temporarily renamed Ball's Fork--became the regional trade center, a position that was reinforced in 1845 when it became the easternmost point on the railroad to Montgomery, AlabamaMontgomery. Loachapoka's influence peaked in the early 1870s, when her population reached nearly 1,300. Within a few years, a collapse of trade due to the Panic of 1873 and additional rail lines in the area sent Loachapoka into economic decline. Loachapoka roughly stabilized as a small farming community by the mid-1900s, and by the early 2000s had become a small-town suburb of Auburn, AlabamaAuburn. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loachapoka%2C_Alabama
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