Counties
County | County seat | Est. | Etymology | Population | Area | Map |
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Adair County | Kirksville | 1841 | John Adair (1757–1840), pioneer, soldier, and seventh Governor of Kentucky | 25,607 | 568 sq mi (1,471 km2) |
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Andrew County | Savannah | 1841 | Andrew Jackson Davis (1826–1910), spiritualist and missionary who settled in St. Louis | 17,291 | 435 sq mi (1,127 km2) |
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Atchison County | Rock Port | 1843 | U.S. Senator David Rice Atchison (1807–1886), a Democrat from Missouri | 5,685 | 545 sq mi (1,412 km2) |
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Audrain County | Mexico | 1831 | James H. Audrain, a War of 1812 colonel Missouri State Legislator | 25,529 | 693 sq mi (1,795 km2) |
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Barry County | Cassville | 1835 | William Taylor Barry (1784–1835), jurist and United States Postmaster General | 35,597 | 779 sq mi (2,018 km2) |
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Barton County | Lamar | 1855 | U.S. Senator David Barton (1783–1837), one of the first senators from Missouri | 12,402 | 594 sq mi (1,538 km2) |
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Bates County | Butler | 1841 | Frederick Bates (1777–1825), the second governor of Missouri | 17,049 | 848 sq mi (2,196 km2) |
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Benton County | Warsaw | 1835 | Thomas Hart Benton (1782–1858), U.S. Senator from Missouri | 19,056 | 706 sq mi (1,829 km2) |
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Bollinger County | Marble Hill | 1851 | George Frederick Bollinger (1770–1842), early settler of Missouri | 12,363 | 621 sq mi (1,608 km2) |
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Boone County | Columbia | 1820 | Daniel Boone (1734–1820), American pioneer and hunter | 162,642 | 685 sq mi (1,774 km2) |
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Buchanan County | Saint Joseph | 1838 | James Buchanan (1791–1868), 15th President of the United States | 89,201 | 410 sq mi (1,062 km2) |
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Butler County | Poplar Bluff | 1849 | William O. Butler (1791–1880), U.S. Representative from Kentucky and vice-presidential nominee under Lewis Cass | 42,794 | 698 sq mi (1,808 km2) |
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Caldwell County | Kingston | 1836 | Disputed; either John Caldwell, an Indian scout and friend of respected Colonel Alexander William Doniphan; John Caldwell, Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky; or Mathew Caldwell, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence | 9,424 | 429 sq mi (1,111 km2) |
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Callaway County | Fulton | 1821 | James Callaway (1783–1815), soldier during the War of 1812 and grandson of Daniel Boone | 44,332 | 839 sq mi (2,173 km2) |
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Camden County | Camdenton | 1841 | Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden (1714–1794), an English lawyer, judge, Whig politician, and proponent of civil liberties | 44,002 | 655 sq mi (1,696 km2) |
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Cape Girardeau County | Jackson | 1812 | Sieur de Girardot, a French officer and early explorer of the region | 75,674 | 579 sq mi (1,500 km2) |
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Carroll County | Carrollton | 1833 | Charles Carroll (1737–1832), delegate to the Continental Congress and U.S. Senator for Maryland | 9,295 | 695 sq mi (1,800 km2) |
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Carter County | Van Buren | 1859 | Zimri Carter, pioneering settler | 6,265 | 508 sq mi (1,316 km2) |
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Cass County | Harrisonville | 1833 | Lewis Cass (1782–1866), senator from Michigan | 99,478 | 699 sq mi (1,810 km2) |
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Cedar County | Stockton | 1845 | Named for the abundance of Eastern Red Cedar trees | 13,982 | 476 sq mi (1,233 km2) |
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Chariton County | Keytesville | 1821 | Chariton River, a tributary of the Missouri River, whose naming origin is disputed | 7,831 | 756 sq mi (1,958 km2) |
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Christian County | Ozark | 1859 | William Christian (1743–1786), colonel in the American Revolution | 77,422 | 563 sq mi (1,458 km2) |
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Clark County | Kahoka | 1836 | William Clark (1770–1838), American explorer, soldier, Indian agent, and territorial governor | 7,139 | 507 sq mi (1,313 km2) |
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Clay County | Liberty | 1822 | Henry Clay (1777–1852), American Senator and orator from Kentucky | 221,939 | 396 sq mi (1,026 km2) |
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Clinton County | Plattsburg | 1833 | George Clinton (1739–1812), soldier and Governor of New York, considered one of the Founding Fathers of the United States | 20,743 | 419 sq mi (1,085 km2) |
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Cole County | Jefferson City | 1820 | Stephen Cole, pioneering settler | 75,990 | 392 sq mi (1,015 km2) |
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Cooper County | Boonville | 1818 | Sarshel Benjamin Cooper, pioneering settler | 17,601 | 565 sq mi (1,463 km2) |
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Crawford County | Steelville | 1829 | William H. Crawford (1772–1834), U.S. Senator from Georgia, U.S. Secretary of Treasury, and judge | 24,696 | 743 sq mi (1,924 km2) |
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Dade County | Greenfield | 1841 | Major Francis L. Dade (1793?–1835), Major in the U.S. 4th Infantry Regiment, United States Army, during the Second Seminole War | 7,883 | 490 sq mi (1,269 km2) |
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Dallas County | Buffalo | 1841 | George M. Dallas (1792–1864), U.S. Vice President under James K. Polk | 16,777 | 542 sq mi (1,404 km2) |
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Daviess County | Gallatin | 1836 | Joseph Hamilton Daveiss (1774–1811), commanded the Dragoons of the Indiana Militia at the Battle of Tippecanoe | 8,433 | 567 sq mi (1,469 km2) |
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DeKalb County | Maysville | 1843 | Johann de Kalb (1721–1780), a German soldier who served as a major general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War | 12,892 | 424 sq mi (1,098 km2) |
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Dent County | Salem | 1851 | James Dent, pioneering settler | 15,657 | 754 sq mi (1,953 km2) |
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Douglas County | Ava | 1857 | Stephen A. Douglas (1813–1861), American Senator from Illinois, and the Democratic nominee for President in 1860 | 13,684 | 815 sq mi (2,111 km2) |
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Dunklin County | Kennett | 1843 | Daniel Dunklin (1790–1844), fifth governor of Missouri | 31,953 | 546 sq mi (1,414 km2) |
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Franklin County | Union | 1818 | Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790), writer, publisher, orator, and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States | 101,492 | 922 sq mi (2,388 km2) |
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Gasconade County | Hermann | 1821 | Gasconade River, a tributary of the Missouri River; the river probably derives its name from the French word "gascon" which means braggart, and could be an old satirical name describing those who boast about their adventures upon return to St. Louis | 15,222 | 520 sq mi (1,347 km2) |
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Gentry County | Albany | 1841 | Richard Gentry (1788–1837), a distinguished American military colonel in the Seminole Wars | 6,738 | 492 sq mi (1,274 km2) |
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Greene County | Springfield | 1833 | Nathanael Greene (1742–1786), a major general of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War | 275,174 | 675 sq mi (1,748 km2) |
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Grundy County | Trenton | 1839 | Felix Grundy (1777–1840), U.S. Congressman and U.S. Senator from Tennessee who also served as the 13th Attorney General of the United States | 10,261 | 436 sq mi (1,129 km2) |
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Harrison County | Bethany | 1843 | Albert G. Harrison (1800–1839), U.S. Representative from Missouri | 8,957 | 725 sq mi (1,878 km2) |
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Henry County | Clinton | 1834 | Patrick Henry (1736–1799), first post-colonial Governor of Virginia and prominent figure in the American Revolution | 22,272 | 702 sq mi (1,818 km2) |
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Hickory County | Hermitage | 1845 | Andrew Jackson (1767–1845), seventh U.S. President, who was nicknamed "Old Hickory" during his military service | 9,627 | 399 sq mi (1,033 km2) |
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Holt County | Oregon | 1841 | David Rice Holt, Missouri State Representative | 4,912 | 462 sq mi (1,197 km2) |
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Howard County | Fayette | 1816 | Benjamin Howard (1760–1814), a Congressman from Kentucky, governor of Missouri Territory and a brigadier general in the War of 1812 | 10,144 | 466 sq mi (1,207 km2) |
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Howell County | West Plains | 1857 | Disputed – Josiah Howell, pioneering settler | 40,400 | 928 sq mi (2,404 km2) |
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Iron County | Ironton | 1857 | The abundance of iron ore in the area | 10,630 | 551 sq mi (1,427 km2) |
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Jackson County | Independence | 1826 | Andrew Jackson (1767–1845), U.S. Senator from Tennessee and later President of the United States | 674,158 | 605 sq mi (1,567 km2) |
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Jasper County | Carthage | 1841 | William Jasper (c. 1750–1779), a noted American soldier in the Revolutionary War | 117,404 | 640 sq mi (1,658 km2) |
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Jefferson County | Hillsboro | 1818 | Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), third President of the United States, principal author of the Declaration of Independence, and one of the most influential Founding Fathers | 218,733 | 657 sq mi (1,702 km2) |
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Johnson County | Warrensburg | 1834 | Richard M. Johnson (1780–1850), ninth Vice President of the United States, serving in the administration of Martin Van Buren | 52,595 | 831 sq mi (2,152 km2) |
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Knox County | Edina | 1843 | Henry Knox (1750–1806) an American bookseller from Boston who became the chief artillery officer of the Continental Army and later the nation's first Secretary of War | 4,131 | 506 sq mi (1,311 km2) |
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Laclede County | Lebanon | 1849 | Pierre Laclede (1729–1778), founder of St. Louis, Missouri | 35,571 | 766 sq mi (1,984 km2) |
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Lafayette County | Lexington | 1821 | Gilbert du Motier, the Marquis de Lafayette (1757–1834), French military officer and general in the American Revolutionary War | 33,381 | 629 sq mi (1,629 km2) |
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Lawrence County | Mount Vernon | 1843 | James Lawrence (1781–1813), an American naval officer best known for his last words "Don't give up the ship!" | 38,634 | 613 sq mi (1,588 km2) |
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Lewis County | Monticello | 1833 | Meriwether Lewis (1774–1809), explorer and governor of the Louisiana Territory | 10,211 | 505 sq mi (1,308 km2) |
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Lincoln County | Troy | 1818 | Disputed; either Lincoln County, Kentucky (birthplace of Christopher Clark, a Missouri legislator who advocated for the county's creation),[11] or for Benjamin Lincoln (1733–1810), an American revolutionary war general | 52,566 | 630 sq mi (1,632 km2) |
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Linn County | Linneus | 1837 | Lewis F. Linn (1796–1843), a Jacksonian Democratic U.S. Senator for Missouri | 12,761 | 620 sq mi (1,606 km2) |
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Livingston County | Chillicothe | 1837 | Edward Livingston (1764–1836), a prominent American jurist and statesman, influential in the drafting of the Louisiana Civil Code of 1825, a civil code based largely on the Napoleonic Code | 15,195 | 535 sq mi (1,386 km2) |
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Macon County | Macon | 1837 | Nathaniel Macon (1758–1837), member of the United States House of Representatives from 1791 to 1815 who briefly served in the American Revolutionary War | 15,566 | 804 sq mi (2,082 km2) |
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Madison County | Fredericktown | 1818 | James Madison (1751–1836), politician and political philosopher who served as the fourth President of the United States, and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States | 12,226 | 497 sq mi (1,287 km2) |
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Maries County | Vienna | 1855 | Maries River, possibly a corruption of the French word marais meaning "marsh" or "swamp" | 9,176 | 528 sq mi (1,368 km2) |
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Marion County | Palmyra | 1826 | Francis Marion (1732–1795), a military officer who served in the American Revolutionary War | 28,781 | 438 sq mi (1,134 km2) |
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McDonald County | Pineville | 1847 | Alexander McDonald, American Revolutionary War sergeant | 23,083 | 540 sq mi (1,399 km2) |
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Mercer County | Princeton | 1845 | John F. Mercer (1759–1821), an American lawyer, planter, and Governor of Maryland | 3,785 | 454 sq mi (1,176 km2) |
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Miller County | Tuscumbia | 1837 | John Miller (1781–1846), an American publisher and politician from St. Louis, Missouri. He was the fourth Governor of Missouri and represented Missouri in the U.S. House | 24,748 | 592 sq mi (1,533 km2) |
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Mississippi County | Charleston | 1842 | Mississippi River, the second-longest river in the United States which forms Missouri's eastern border | 14,358 | 413 sq mi (1,070 km2) |
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Moniteau County | California | 1845 | Moniteau Creek; "moniteau" is a French spelling of manitou, the Algonquian Great Spirit | 15,607 | 417 sq mi (1,080 km2) |
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Monroe County | Paris | 1831 | James Monroe (1758–1831), fifth President of the United States who crafted the Missouri Compromise | 8,840 | 646 sq mi (1,673 km2) |
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Montgomery County | Montgomery City | 1818 | Richard Montgomery (1738–1775), an Irish-born soldier who first served in the British Army and later became a brigadier-general in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War | 12,236 | 539 sq mi (1,396 km2) |
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Morgan County | Versailles | 1833 | Daniel Morgan (c. 1736–1802), American pioneer, soldier, and United States Representative from Virginia | 20,565 | 598 sq mi (1,549 km2) |
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New Madrid County | New Madrid | 1812 | Madrid, Spain | 18,956 | 678 sq mi (1,756 km2) |
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Newton County | Neosho | 1838 | John Newton (1755–1780), legendary soldier of the American Revolution | 58,114 | 626 sq mi (1,621 km2) |
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Nodaway County | Maryville | 1843 | Nodaway River, a 120-mile (190 km) long river in southwest Iowa and northwest Missouri | 23,370 | 877 sq mi (2,271 km2) |
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Oregon County | Alton | 1841 | Oregon Territory | 10,881 | 792 sq mi (2,051 km2) |
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Osage County | Linn | 1841 | Osage River, a 360 miles (580 km) long tributary of the Missouri River in central Missouri; the name of the river is probably derived from a French corruption of "Washazhe" – the name of the Osage Native Americans | 13,878 | 606 sq mi (1,570 km2) |
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Ozark County | Gainesville | 1841 | Ozark Mountains – Ozark is the anglicized form of the French "aux arcs", an abbreviation of "Aux Arkansas", which means in the county of Arkansas | 9,723 | 747 sq mi (1,935 km2) |
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Pemiscot County | Caruthersville | 1851 | An American Indian word meaning "liquid mud" | 18,296 | 493 sq mi (1,277 km2) |
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Perry County | Perryville | 1821 | Oliver Hazard Perry (1785–1819), naval officer in the War of 1812 against Britain, earned the title "Hero of Lake Erie" for leading American forces in a decisive naval victory at the Battle of Lake Erie | 18,971 | 475 sq mi (1,230 km2) |
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Pettis County | Sedalia | 1833 | Spencer Darwin Pettis (1802–1831), U.S. Representative from Missouri | 42,201 | 685 sq mi (1,774 km2) |
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Phelps County | Rolla | 1857 | John S. Phelps (1814–1886), a politician, soldier during the American Civil War, and twenty-third Governor of Missouri | 45,156 | 673 sq mi (1,743 km2) |
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Pike County | Bowling Green | 1818 | Zebulon Pike (1778–1813), American soldier and explorer for whom Pikes Peak in Colorado is also named | 18,516 | 673 sq mi (1,743 km2) |
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Platte County | Platte City | 1838 | Platte River, a tributary of the Missouri River, which is in turn named for the French word "platte" meaning flat or shallow | 89,322 | 420 sq mi (1,088 km2) |
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Polk County | Bolivar | 1835 | James K. Polk (1795–1849), 11th President of the United States | 31,137 | 637 sq mi (1,650 km2) |
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Pulaski County | Waynesville | 1833 | Kazimierz Pulaski (1745–1779), Polish soldier of fortune in the American Revolutionary War, he saved the life of George Washington and became a general in the Continental Army | 52,274 | 547 sq mi (1,417 km2) |
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Putnam County | Unionville | 1843 | Israel Putnam (1718–1790), an American army general who fought with distinction at the Battle of Bunker Hill during the American Revolutionary War | 4,979 | 518 sq mi (1,342 km2) |
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Ralls County | New London | 1821 | Daniel Ralls, a Missouri State Representative | 10,167 | 471 sq mi (1,220 km2) |
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Randolph County | Huntsville | 1829 | John Randolph of Roanoke (1773–1833), a leader in Congress from Virginia and spokesman for the "Old Republican" | 25,414 | 482 sq mi (1,248 km2) |
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Ray County | Richmond | 1820 | John Ray, Missouri State Representative | 23,494 | 570 sq mi (1,476 km2) |
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Reynolds County | Centerville | 1845 | Thomas Reynolds (1796–1844), governor of Missouri from 1840 to 1844 | 6,696 | 811 sq mi (2,100 km2) |
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Ripley County | Doniphan | 1831 | Eleazer Wheelock Ripley (1782–1839), Brigadier General in the War of 1812 | 14,100 | 630 sq mi (1,632 km2) |
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Saint Charles County | Saint Charles | 1812 | St. Charles Borromeo (1538–1584), an Italian saint and cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church | 360,485 | 561 sq mi (1,453 km2) |
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Saint Clair County | Osceola | 1841 | Arthur St. Clair (1737–1818), an American soldier and Governor of the Northwest Territory | 9,805 | 677 sq mi (1,753 km2) |
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Saint Francois County | Farmington | 1821 | St. Francis of Assisi (c. 1182–1226), a Catholic deacon and the founder of the Order of Friars Minor, more commonly known as the Franciscans | 65,359 | 450 sq mi (1,165 km2) |
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Saint Louis County | Clayton | 1812 | King Louis IX (1214–1270), King of France from 1226 until his death | 1,000,438 | 508 sq mi (1,316 km2) |
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Saint Louis City | St. Louis | 1876 | King Louis IX (1214–1270), King of France from 1226 until his death | 319,294 | 61.9 sq mi (160 km2) |
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Ste. Genevieve County | Ste. Genevieve | 1812 | St. Genevieve (c. 420 – c. 510), the patron saint of Paris in Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox tradition | 18,145 | 502 sq mi (1,300 km2) |
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Saline County | Marshall | 1820 | Local hot springs | 23,370 | 756 sq mi (1,958 km2) |
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Schuyler County | Lancaster | 1843 | Philip Schuyler (1733–1804), a general in the American Revolution and a United States Senator from New York | 4,431 | 308 sq mi (798 km2) |
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Scotland County | Memphis | 1841 | Scotland (country) | 4,843 | 438 sq mi (1,134 km2) |
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Scott County | Benton | 1822 | John Guier Scott (1819–1892), a U.S. Representative from Missouri | 39,191 | 421 sq mi (1,090 km2) |
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Shannon County | Eminence | 1837 | George Shannon (1785–1836), member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition | 8,441 | 1,004 sq mi (2,600 km2) |
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Shelby County | Shelbyville | 1835 | Isaac Shelby (1750–1826), the first and fifth Governor of Kentucky | 6,373 | 501 sq mi (1,298 km2) |
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Stoddard County | Bloomfield | 1835 | Amos Stoddard (1762–1813), the only commandant of Upper Louisiana for the French Republic and the only commandant for the District of Louisiana for the United States in 1804 during the handover of the Louisiana Purchase | 29,968 | 827 sq mi (2,142 km2) |
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Stone County | Galena | 1851 | William Stone, first elected judge of Taney County | 32,202 | 463 sq mi (1,199 km2) |
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Sullivan County | Milan | 1843 | John Sullivan (1740–1795), American Revolutionary War general | 6,714 | 651 sq mi (1,686 km2) |
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Taney County | Forsyth | 1837 | Roger Brooke Taney (1777–1864), eleventh United States Attorney General and fifth Chief Justice of the United States | 51,675 | 632 sq mi (1,637 km2) |
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Texas County | Houston | 1843 | Republic of Texas | 26,008 | 1,179 sq mi (3,054 km2) |
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Vernon County | Nevada | 1851 | Miles Vernon, Missouri State Senator – the county was originally defined as having the same boundaries as Bates county, but was later declared unconstitutional and changed | 21,159 | 834 sq mi (2,160 km2) |
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Warren County | Warrenton | 1833 | Joseph Warren (1741–1775), Revolutionary War doctor and general | 32,513 | 432 sq mi (1,119 km2) |
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Washington County | Potosi | 1813 | George Washington (1732–1799), commander of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War and first President of the United States | 25,195 | 760 sq mi (1,968 km2) |
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Wayne County | Greenville | 1818 | Anthony Wayne (1745–1796), United States Army general and statesman | 13,521 | 761 sq mi (1,971 km2) |
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Webster County | Marshfield | 1855 | Daniel Webster (1782–1852), U.S. Secretary of State and Senator from Massachusetts | 36,202 | 593 sq mi (1,536 km2) |
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Worth County | Grant City | 1861 | William J. Worth (1794–1849), a United States general during the Mexican–American War | 2,171 | 266 sq mi (689 km2) |
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Wright County | Hartville | 1841 | Silas Wright (1795–1847), an American Democratic politician and Governor of New York | 18,815 | 682 sq mi (1,766 km2) |