Jefferson County Courthouse (1889): Difference between revisions
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:''This article is about the 1889 courthouse. For others, see [[Jefferson County Courthouse (disambiguation)]].'' | :''This article is about the 1889 courthouse. For others, see [[Jefferson County Courthouse (disambiguation)]].'' | ||
[[Image:Jefferson County Courthouse 1889.jpg|center|thumb| | [[Image:Jefferson County Courthouse 1889.jpg|center|thumb|640px|The 1889 Jefferson County Courthouse]] | ||
The '''Jefferson County Courthouse''' was a large brick and stone building erected in [[1889]] to house the offices and courts of [[Jefferson County]]. | The '''Jefferson County Courthouse''' was a large brick and stone building erected in [[1889]] to house the offices and courts of [[Jefferson County]]. | ||
Revision as of 23:39, 5 March 2015
- This article is about the 1889 courthouse. For others, see Jefferson County Courthouse (disambiguation).
The Jefferson County Courthouse was a large brick and stone building erected in 1889 to house the offices and courts of Jefferson County.
It was built on the corner of 21st Street and 3rd Avenue North, the same site as the earlier 1875 courthouse, which had been condemned as unsafe.
The Richardsonian Romanesque design was created by architect Henry Wolters of Louisville, Kentucky in association with Charles Wheelock of Birmingham. Charles Pearce of Indianapolis, Indiana served as general contractor for the $300,000 building. With its massive 180-foot-tall domed clock tower, it was one of the largest and most distinctive structures in Birmingham for many years.
The building was demolished in 1937, following construction of a new Jefferson County Courthouse as part of a "Civic Center" at Woodrow Wilson Park. It was thought that clearing the site would promote redevelopment, but the lot accommodated only surface parking until construction of One Concord Center office building in 2002.
References
- White, Marjorie Longenecker (1977) Downtown Birmingham: Architectural and Historical Walking Tour Guide. Birmingham: Birmingham Historical Society.
External links
- "Jefferson County Courthouse Site marker at the Historical Marker Database
- "Old Jefferson County Courthouse at Emporis.com