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Greene County Courthouse is a historic county courthouse located at Stanardsville, Greene County, Virginia. It was built in 1838–1839, and is a two-story, gable roofed brick building. The front facade features a three-bay, pedimented tetrastyle portico addition using Tuscan order columns and a Roman Doric entablature added in 1927–1928.
This is a list of former and current non-federal courthouses in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Each of the 67 counties in the Commonwealth has a city or borough designated as the county seat where the county government resides, including a county courthouse for the court of general jurisdiction, the Court of Common Pleas. Other courthouses are used by the three state-wide appellate courts ...
Pennsylvania Route 21 joins US 19 through downtown Waynesburg on High and Greene streets. PA 21 leads east 2 miles (3 km) to Interstate 79 at Exit 14 and continues east another 25 miles (40 km) to Uniontown. To the west PA 21 leads 6 miles (9.7 km) to Rogersville and 24 miles (39 km) to the West Virginia border.
The Greene County Sheriff's Office (GCSO) is Greene County, Virginia's primary law enforcement agency. After a 1994 study rated Greene County the second most dangerous county in Virginia for traffic, the Sheriff's office cracked down on speeding. In 1997, the office wrote 15 times more tickets than in 1992. [21]
Jeffery, an Erie resident, resigned from her $37,713-a-year job in the Clerk of Courts office on Oct. 4, the day after detectives with the Erie County District Attorney's Office started ...
The Waynesburg Historic District is a national historic district that is located in Waynesburg, Greene County, Pennsylvania. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [ 1 ]
The county in 2023 hired ElectionIQ to print ballots, including mail-in ballots, and send them to voters who requested them. It's not had any issues with the vendor until now.
Greene County is a county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. As of the 2020 census, the population was 35,954. [1] Its county seat is Waynesburg. [2] Greene County was created on February 9, 1796, from part of Washington County and named for General Nathanael Greene. The county is part of the Southwest Pennsylvania region of the state.