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Montague County
Courthouse
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark
TE photo 2003 |
The Present
County Courthouse
- Montague, Texas
Date - 1912
Architect - George Burnett
Style - Classical Revival
Material - Brick, steel and concrete
The courthouse is surprisingly massive for a town with such a small
population. |
THE COURTHOUSES
OF MONTAGUE COUNTY
By Terry
Jeanson
Cut from the western part of Cooke
County, Montague
County was officially organized in 1858. None of the three existing
small settlements within the county were near the center of the
county, so the state donated land for the creation of a county seat
which was named Montague. The county
and county seat were named for Daniel Montague, a surveyor and state
senator during the Civil War. Montague was involved in the Great
Hanging in Gainesville in 1862, in which many Union sympathizers
were killed. He fled to Mexico after the war and returned to Texas
in September of 1876, dying three months later.
The first courthouse for Montague
County was a log cabin built in 1858 with local materials. It
was only meant to be a temporary structure but was in use until
after the Civil War. An old frame store on the north side of the
square was used as a courthouse before a new wood-frame two story
building was built and used as the courthouse until it burned down
on February 25, 1873. All of the county records were lost in the
fire, so information on the early courthouses is scarce.
A rented house and a former saloon were used until a new courthouse
was built in 1879. It was constructed of sandstone with a tin roof
and a dome and was built by John S. Thomas of Fort
Worth for $22,000. This courthouse burned down on March 31,
1884. The fire was blamed on three men who had been indicted for
cattle rustling and were trying to get rid of the evidence. The
destruction of the courthouse led residents of Bowie
to try and steal the county seat away from Montague,
but they failed to get the 2/3 majority of votes that they needed.
Other buildings in town were used for court proceedings until the
next courthouse was completed in 1885. It was built by T. J. Jarrell
for $35, 500 and designed by Fort
Worth architect James J. Kane, the architect of the 1886
Bosque County courthouse. It originally had a clock tower that
had to be removed after it was damaged by a tornado on July 5, 1905.
Another storm on April 30, 1912 broke many windows and damaged the
roof so badly that it was decided to demolish this courthouse for
the construction of a new one.
Court proceedings were held in the opera house until the construction
of the current courthouse was completed in 1913. The brick, Classical
Revival style building was designed by Waco
architect George L. Burnett and built by A. H. Rodgers of Henrietta.
The cost of the courthouse was originally to be $90,000, but structural
changes raised the cost to $100,000. A county jail was located on
the fourth floor until the construction of a new jail
on the square was completed in 1927.
A 1939 wind storm damaged the courthouse’s original dome and it
was removed and replaced with what has been referred to as a “penthouse,”
“a doghouse,” or a “chicken coop.” The interior was renovated as
well, covering most of the historic finishes, especially in the
courtroom. An exterior wheelchair ramp and a glass elevator were
installed in 1985. Despite the changes, the building still retains
many of its original architectural features. In 2013, a new county
courthouse annex opened on the north side of the square and the
1912 courthouse received a new tile roof. The replacement of the
courthouse’s windows was completed in 2014 and efforts still continue
to have the dome replaced and the courthouse historically restored.
- Terry
Jeanson, February 3, 2015
Sources:
The Handbook of Texas Online;
The Texas Historical Commission’s County Atlas at http://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/shell-county.htm;
Montague County History at www.montaguecountyhistory.com, “History
of the Montague County Courthouses” written by Vicki Jones and Martha
Romine;
“Montague County Buys Work on Courthouse” by Barbara Green, Bowie
News for the Times Record News in Wichita Falls, TX, April 15, 2013;
“Courthouse Across a Century” by Barbara Green, Bowie News for the
Times Record News in Wichita Falls, TX, October 8, 2013.
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Historical Marker:
Montague County
Courthouse
Montague
County was created in Dec. 1857 and organized in Aug. 1858.
A log cabin and a frame store served as temporary courthouses. Fires
destroyed a two-story frame building (1873) and a two-story stone
courthouse (1884). In that same year, construction began on a second
stone courthouse, which lasted until a 1912 storm severely damaged
it. County commissioners selected Waco
architect George Burnett to design the present classical revival
style temple of Justice. A. H. Rodgers of Henrietta
was the contractor. The three-story brick and stone courthouse with
raised basement has staircases at all four entrances, porticos,
pilasters and dentils. Completed in May 1913, it has been the center
of government and activity in the county for more than a century.
Recorded
Texas Historic Landmark, 2013
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Montague County
Courthouse
Photo ca1915 courtesy THC |
The courthouse
from the northwest corner. The "chicken coop" can be seen on the roof
and the fire escape slide on the northeast corner (left side of the
picture.)
Photo courtesy Terry
Jeanson, April 2006 |
Detail of the
south side portico
Photo courtesy Terry
Jeanson, April 2006 |
Style - Second
Empire
Demolished in 1912
See History |
1927 Montague
County Jail
The third structure to serve as Montague County Jail, this building
was erected by the Southern Prison Company of San
Antonio in 1927. The first floor contained living quarters for
the jailer and his family, and six prison cells were maintained on
the second floor. Used as a jail until a new facility was built in
1980, the building's architectural features include its entry portico,
stone cornice, cast stone window sills, and simple tile detailing.
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1991 |
Montague County
Courthouse and Jail
Photo courtesy Barclay
Gibson, April 2003 |
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