The Wilkes County Courthouse is a historic government building and clock tower located in the city of Washington, Georgia , the seat of Wilkes County . The latest in a series of courthouses in the county's history, the current building was completed in 1904 and since that date has been the official home of Wilkes County's Superior Court , and the base of the county's government. On September 18, 1980, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places .
24-434: Wilkes County Courthouse may refer to: Wilkes County Courthouse (Georgia) , Washington, Georgia Wilkes County Courthouse (North Carolina) , Wilkesboro, North Carolina Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Wilkes County Courthouse . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
48-405: A clock tower . This most recent among Wilkes' former courthouses stood in the center of Washington's public square and served the county until 1904, when it was replaced by the current courthouse, then demolished. Washington in the 1890s was rife with rumors regarding railroad development and potential prosperity for Wilkes County. This fueled a push for civic projects and improvements by which
72-681: A child, Alexander H. Stephens had studied at the school in Washington presided over by Presbyterian minister Alexander Hamilton Webster. He later became a politician and was elected as Vice-President of the Confederacy. No major battles of the Civil War were fought in or near Washington, but the city is notable as the site where Confederate President Jefferson Davis held his last meeting with his cabinet. On April 3, 1865, with Union troops under General Ulysses S. Grant poised to capture
96-559: A select group of fifty-two of the state's former and current County Courthouses which were chosen based on their historical significance in the areas of architecture, communications, economics, law, and politics/government. All the properties in the Georgia County Courthouses MPS were accepted to the NRHP on September 18, 1980. A new jail wing was added in 1911 onto the rear of the courthouse. A plaque mounted on
120-681: Is a branch of the Toombs Judicial Circuit of the Tenth Judicial Administrative District of the Courts of Georgia , presides over jury trials, rules on evidence, hears motions, and renders verdicts in bench trials. Superior Court Judges are constitutionally elected to four-year terms of office. Other judicial bodies under the Courts of Georgia that are housed within the county courthouse include
144-422: Is one of the eight original counties created by Georgia 's first state constitution on February 5, 1777, and the only county then not previously colonized or settled. A wilderness frontier with a handful of newcomers, Wilkes County was devoid of infrastructure. When the pioneers of Wilkes convened their first court on August 25, 1779, it was held in a private residence, the first of many transient venues during
168-472: Is today the public square in Washington. The next building had two stories and was originally the residence of Italian immigrant and U.S. patriot, Major Ferdinand Phinizy, who sold the house to Wilkes County Commissioners . Courthouse number three served the county between 1804 and 1817. A Federal-style , brick structure in 1817 became Wilkes county's next courthouse and the first in Georgia to feature
192-535: Is water. As of the 2020 United States census , there were 3,754 people, 1,646 households, and 904 families residing in the city. The Wilkes County School District holds pre-school to grade twelve, and consists of one primary school, one elementary school, a middle school, and a high school. The district has 116 full-time teachers and over 1,858 students. Dr. Rosemary Caddell is the Superintendent of Schools. One of Washington's most lingering mysteries
216-452: The 1904 roof and Gothic embellished clock tower were omitted from the 1989 restoration due to limited project budget. Prominent African American contractor Monroe Morton of Athens, Georgia was involved in the construction of the courthouse. Wilkes County Courthouse was nominated for the U.S. National Register of Historic Places ( NRHP ) as part of a Multiple property submission (or MPS ). The Georgia County Courthouses MPS included
240-946: The Heard house (now used as the Georgia Branch Bank Building), with fourteen officials present. Several historic sites in Washington are on the National Register of Historic Places , including the Wilkes County Courthouse , the Robert Toombs House State Historic Site , the Washington-Wilkes Historical Museum , the Mary Willis Public Library , Cherry Grove Baptist Church Schoolhouse , and
264-605: The Magistrate Court of Wilkes County and the Probate Court of Wilkes County. Meetings of the five-member Wilkes County Board of Commissioners convene at the courthouse. The courthouse also houses the office of the County Administrator. Heard%27s Fort, Georgia Washington is the county seat of Wilkes County , Georgia , United States. Under its original name, Heard's Fort, it
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#1732790083210288-614: The building was razed to make way for the new courthouse. The events of 1865 are commemorated today with a plaque and a granite monument in front of the County Courthouse, as well as a Georgia Historical Society Marker about Jefferson Davis. The Wilkes County, Georgia Courthouse and clock tower were designed by architect Frank Pierce Milburn , who was heavily influenced by the Richardsonian Romanesque and Romanesque Revival styles of architecture. It
312-474: The capital at Richmond, Virginia , Davis escaped for Danville , together with the Confederate cabinet. After leaving Danville, and continuing south, Davis met with his Cabinet for the last time on May 5, 1865, in Washington, along with a hand-picked escort led by Given Campbell, including his personal body guard, Sgt. Joseph A Higgenbotham, Jr., of Amherst/Nelson County, Virginia. The meeting took place at
336-495: The community hoped to more strongly lure railroad investment. The replacement of the 1817 courthouse soon became one such project, and before the century was out, County Commissioners had purchased the lot across from their existing courthouse, where in a few years they would build its replacement. Already standing on said lot was a three-story 1824 structure known as the Heard House (not to be confused with Heard's Fort ) or
360-470: The county's infancy. In 1780, the Georgia Legislature called for the establishment of the town of Washington . With the town to serve as a seat of government, court proceedings could be given a dedicated, regular venue. Wilkes County Court found its first permanent venue in a room at the local tavern, which effectively served as official courtroom until 1785. The tavern occupied part of
384-481: The jail's exterior commemorates the first hanging to occur there. The December 5, 1911 execution from the third floor gallows happened before the jail's official dedication in January 1912. A substantial addition was built upon the rear of the courthouse in 1989. Today's Wilkes County Courthouse continues to operate in its traditional capacity. It remains the location of The Superior Court of Wilkes County, which
408-423: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wilkes_County_Courthouse&oldid=964359366 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Wilkes County Courthouse (Georgia) Wilkes County, Georgia
432-784: The old Georgia State Bank building. As the American Civil War was nearing its end, this building was the place where the President of the Confederacy , Jefferson Davis , convened the final session of the Confederate Cabinet. At this May 4, 1865 meeting the government of the Confederate States of America was officially dissolved. Despite this unique distinction in Southern and U.S. history,
456-443: The original 1904 construction were destroyed in 1958, as a fire ravaged the courthouse's top half. As a result of the fire, the building was tower-less and capped by a flat roof for more than three decades until a restoration effort took place in 1989. A partial restoration, the project restored a roof which approximates the original design, and a clock tower, albeit much shorter than the original. The ornamental detailing evident in
480-518: The recently restored historic Fitzpatrick Hotel , built in 1898. Washington is located at 33°44′7″N 82°44′29″W / 33.73528°N 82.74139°W / 33.73528; -82.74139 (33.735394, −82.741420). According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 7.9 square miles (20 km ), of which 7.8 square miles (20 km ) is land and 0.04 square miles (0.10 km ) (0.25%)
504-399: The same lot where currently stands today's courthouse. By 1785, a new, independent building constructed of logs became Wilkes County's first genuine courthouse. According to a plaque on the present courthouse lawn, the log courthouse was replaced after only a year by a clapboard-style courthouse, which served the county from 1786 to 1804. Both the log and clapboard courthouses stood in what
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#1732790083210528-607: The temporary capital of the new state of Georgia from February 3, 1780, until early 1781. The Battle of Kettle Creek , one of the most important battles of the American Revolutionary War to be fought in Georgia, was fought on February 14, 1779, in Wilkes County, about eleven miles (17.7 km) from present-day Washington. The American Patriots were victorious, taking 75 prisoners and killing roughly 70 Loyalists, while losing 32 of their own men. As
552-459: Was for a brief time during the American Revolutionary War the Georgia state capital. It is noteworthy as the place where the Confederacy voted to dissolve itself, effectively ending the American Civil War . The population was 4,134 as of the 2010 census. The city is often referred to as Washington-Wilkes, to distinguish it from other places named Washington. Heard's Fort was established in 1774 by colonist Stephen Heard . The settlement served as
576-446: Was originally constructed between 1903 and 1904 using sand-colored brick accented by red brick and natural stone. The total cost of the original construction was $ 40,000. The courthouse's original design and construction included extensive detail work around the base of the roof and elaborate ornamentation across the roof as a whole, plus a Gothic accented clock tower which nearly doubled the building's total height. These aspects of
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