Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
When county seats have been moved, a new courthouse was typically constructed. Courthouses in Georgia have also been destroyed by disasters including fire, tornadoes, war, and arson. The most recent county courthouse to suffer a disaster was the burning of Hancock County, Georgia's courthouse in August 2014.
Pages in category "County courthouses in Georgia (U.S. state)" The following 87 pages are in this category, out of 87 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Waynesville was the county seat of Wayne County for several nonconsecutive periods in the mid-1800s; Three county seats have later become the county seats of other counties: Pond Town was the temporary county seat of Lee County, Georgia when the county was first established from Muscogee (Creek) Nation lands in 1826. The county was very large ...
A list of courthouses in Georgia may refer to: List of county courthouses in Georgia (U.S. state), county courthouses in the American state of Georgia; List of United States federal courthouses in Georgia, federal courthouses in the American state of Georgia; List of courthouses in Georgia (country), courthouses in the country of Georgia
It was also used as the Spalding County Jail, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. [1] The building's address is 232 East Broad Street. [1] It is a two-story painted-brick building. It was built by David Demarest (1811-1879), who also built the NRHP-listed Greene County Courthouse in Greensboro, Georgia. [2]
Historically Mississippi may have had a county court in each of its 82 counties but in 2016, Mississippi has just 19 county courts. There are in fact at least five distinct types of non-Federal courts in Mississippi: County courts are created by the state legislature to reduce the workload of circuit courts and chancery courts. Adams County ...
Evans County Courthouse (2012) Evans County was created in 1914, first by a proposed constitutional amendment in the Georgia General Assembly on August 11 and then officially ratified by a vote of the citizens of Georgia on November 23. [3] With the creation of the new county a courthouse was needed.
Meriwether County Courthouse is a historic county courthouse in Greenville, Georgia, county seat of Meriwether County, Georgia. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 7, 1973. The courthouse was built in 1903–1904 according to a Classical Revival design by J. W. Golucke.