The Florida Parishes are the parishes in Louisiana that vanished in 1802. After the purchase in 1803, the united states created state boundaries between the Florida Parishes and Louisiana.
Apparently, Scotlandville was a part of what was called the West Florida Parishes, since it is in East Baton Rouge Parish, and East Baton Rouge Parish was included in The Republic of West Florida (which had nothing to do with the state of Florida, by the way), which covered some of the southern counties in Alabama and several in Mississippi, as well as those in today's Louisiana.
There are no countries in Illinois. As for parishes, the only parishes in Illinois are Roman Catholic parishes. See related link.
Counties in Louisiana are called parishes and it is the only state with parishes.
there are 5 different parishes
there are 12 parishes in jersey.
There are 21 parishes in the Bahamas
Jamaica is divide into 14 Parishes It like America is divide into 50 states but Jamaica call it parishes
st tammany and jefferson
Donna Burge Adams has written: 'Baptist and Methodist records of the Louisiana, Florida parishes' -- subject(s): Church records and registers, Genealogy 'Post office records 1832-1900' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Postmasters, Registers 'Women in the Florida parishes' -- subject(s): Court records, Genealogy, History, Sources, Women
The plural form for parish is parishes; the plural possessive form is parishes'.
Because they're parishes, not counties.