Results for Our House
Carbon County Courthouse
Butte architect P. J. Donahue drew the plans for the 1899 ...
Old Muster Ground and Courthouse
This lot was designated the parade ground in the or...
Courthouse Square
For 104 years this block was the official site of executiv...
First Court House
in Merced County
Erected 1857
This monumen...
Buckingham Courthouse
Designed by Thomas Jefferson in 1821, Burned in 1869, Rebu...
Granite County Courthouse
The first permanent home for Granite County offices was co...
Pike County Courthouse
The Pike County Courthouse was at Piketon from 1815...
Appomattox Court House
Here, amidst the once-quiet streets and lanes of Ap...
Appomattox Court House
Here, amidst the once-quiet streets and lanes of Ap...
Prince George Court House Road
This old road was used by both Confederate and Union Armie...
Results for Our House
Carbon County Courthouse
Butte architect P. J. Donahue drew the plans for the 1899 landmark after fire destroyed its predecessor. Situated at the busy northern end of the commercial district, the building today provides an excellent example of restrained, classically proportioned public building ...
Old Muster Ground and Courthouse
This lot was designated the parade ground in the original survey of the town in 1737. It served as the muster ground for the local militia during colonial and Revolutionary times. The present courthouse, designed by Robert Mills, was built ...
Courthouse Square
For 104 years this block was the official site of executive and judicial government for Hillsborough County, Florida. The first courthouse, a log building burned by Seminole Indians in 1836, possibly stood here. Subsequent ones were built on this square ...
First Court House
in Merced County
Erected 1857
This monument commemorates the
Seventy-fifth anniversary of
the organization of Merced County
and is dedicated to the memory
our pioneers
by
Yosemite Parlor No. 24, N.S.G.W. Merced
May 20, 1930
Marker is at the intersection ...
Buckingham Courthouse
Designed by Thomas Jefferson in 1821, Burned in 1869, Rebuilt in 1878. The exterior follows Jefferson’s plan with the interior redesigned. Copy of original plan and specifications on display in courthouse. Registered in 1969 as a National and Virginia Historic ...
Granite County Courthouse
The first permanent home for Granite County offices was completed in 1913. Prominent Montana architects John Link and Charles Haire designed the building. Its cut stonework is, appropriately, made of Montana granite. Granite County commissioners paid the Gagnon and Company ...
Pike County Courthouse
The Pike County Courthouse was at Piketon from 1815-1861 when county residents voted to move the county seat to Waverly. The Waverly Public Square was donated to the county by the Meschech Downing family in September, 1861. A committee was ...
Appomattox Court House
Here, amidst the once-quiet streets and lanes of Appomattox Court House, Lee, Grant, and their tired armies enacted one of the great dramas in American history.
“General, this is deeply humiliating; but I console myself with the thought that the whole ...
Appomattox Court House
Here, amidst the once-quiet streets and lanes of Appomattox Court House, Lee, Grant, and their tired armies enacted one of the great dramas in American history.
“General, this is deeply humiliating; but I console myself with the thought that the whole ...
Prince George Court House Road
This old road was used by both Confederate and Union Armies in the fighting around Petersburg.
Marker can be reached from Siege Road 1.6 miles south of East Washington Street (Virginia Route 36).
Courtesy hmdb.org