Hawkins County Courthouse

Hawkins County Courthouse

Infobox nrhp
name = Hawkins County Courthouse
nrhp_type =


caption = The Courthouse is located
within a registered Historic District
location = 100 East Main Street, Rogersville, Tennessee
nearest_city =
lat_degrees = 36.407003
lat_minutes =
lat_seconds =
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 83.006583
long_minutes =
long_seconds =
long_direction = W
area =
built = 1836
architect = John Dameron
architecture = Federal, with neoclassical influence
added =
visitation_num =
visitation_year =
refnum =
mpsub =
governing_body = Hawkins County, Tennessee
The Hawkins County Courthouse is the seat of county government for Hawkins County, Tennessee. It was built in 1836, it is one of six antebellum courthouses still in use in Tennessee, and it is the oldest courthouse still in use in the state.

History

A new county seat

Hawkins County was first organized in 1786 by the State of North Carolina; Rogersville then called Hawkins Courthouse, was selected as the county seat due to the diligence of its founder and tireless promoter, Joseph Rogers (son-in-law to a prominent local settler, Colonel Thomas Amis, a French Huguenot who worked with the Irish-born Rogers after Rogers wedded Amis’ daughter Mary).

The seat of county government was first established in the back of Rogers’ first tavern, a twenty-six square feet log structure that boasted an attached lean-to with jail-stocks. In 1796, when Tennessee attained statehood, it was in this log structure that the vote was tallied and proclaimed. In 1810, the State set up a Circuit Court for Hawkins County, prompting the county justices to build a newer, larger log-and-clapboard structure on what had become Rogersville’s Main Street (which corresponded to the Great Stage Road connecting Washington, D.C. with Knoxville and the Cumberland Gap to Kentucky). Chancery Court was first held in this building in 1825.

Third courthouse needed

By 1835, the county, now boasting three towns (including Rogersville, Bulls Gap, and Surgoinsville), had outgrown its second, log-based courthouse, and the county set out to buy land and build a courthouse commensurate with growing Rogersville’s new architectural prominence (as detailed below). The lot upon which the Courthouse now stands was purchased from Louisiana Rogers Mitchell, daughter of town founder Joseph Rogers, who had bequeathed it to her in his will after his death in 1833. In 1836, the Mitchells sold the lot to the Justices of the Court of Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Hawkins County for $500. The justices planned to follow the patterns established in nearby Virginia and North Carolina in constructing their courthouse, and in 1836, they engaged John Dameron, the most prominent architect in the region, to draw up the plans for the new building.

Architect chosen

The justices’ choice of Dameron was in keeping with the architect’s prior experience in Rogersville: he had already designed and overseen the construction of Rogersville’s First Presbyterian Church (ca. 1821) in Federal style and the Hale Springs Inn (ca. 1824) in Georgian style (he would later build the Second Presbyterian Church (today’s Rogersville Presbyterian Church, ca. 1840) in Greek Revival style).

Dameron received the contract to build the new structure on November 28, 1836. Over the course of the next few weeks, Dameron chose a different style for the new courthouse than any of his previous Rogersville designs. Thomas Jefferson had drawn plans for a courthouse in Botetourt County, Virginia in 1818, and Dameron, who grew up near the Botetourt county seat of Fincastle, was familiar with Jefferson’s design. Further, Dameron was familiar with Thomas Crutchfield’s 1824 adaptation of Jefferson’s Botetourt design (Crutchfield, too, was a native of Botetourt), the nearby Greene County Courthouse in Greeneville, Tennessee.

Plans for the new courthouse

The plan was basically an enlargement of the Botetourt design with the addition of a taller tower and a bell-shaped cupola with Georgian-style, copper finials. The Jeffersonian style chosen by Dameron combines Palladian proportions and themes with the late-Georgian neoclassicism characteristic of the early Republican period. Features included red brick construction; all-white painted columns; all-white painted trim; unfluted columns; Tuscan, Doric, Corinthian, or Ionic order capitals; portico-and-pediment primary entries; classical moldings; and square, round, octagonal, and fan-shaped windows or pediment openings.

The original Dameron design includes all the elements of Jeffersonian style: the Hawkins County Courthouse is built of red bricks laid in the Fleming bond pattern; features all-white painted columns and trim; unfluted Tuscan columns; guilloche-patterned carving on the architrave of the thrice-repeated Palladian windows is also used in the roof cornice. Above a simple, double-doored main entrance is an elaborate double-door with a carved pediment adorned with dentils, fanlight and pilasters. On the first floor, twelve-over-twelve window openings are contrasted on the second floor with Palladian windows with Roman-arch keystone (a motif repeated in portico).

In the original design, a massive three-tiered tower is topped by a bell-shaped, copper cupola. The first and second tiers (which were of equal width) are cubic in shape, with large, Georgian-style painted shutters covering a false window opening. The third stage is octagonal, with Palladian-shaped, closed, Georgian-style painted shutters covering false openings . At the bottom of the cupola, the guilloche-patterned cornice molding was repeated with the octagonal bell cupola surmounted by a lightning-rod spire with a large, copper ball finial. Further Georgian influence can be detected in the original design’s twin chimneys, which featured cornice-like molding that matched the dentils elsewhere on the structure. Inside the tower, in the third tier below the cupola, a large copper bell was used to call citizens to the courthouse for public functions (only twenty-five years later, in 1862, the bell was donated to the Confederacy, and shipped to Georgia to be melted down).

Renovations in 1870

The design was executed largely according to Dameron’s plans, and remained intact for thirty-three years. In 1870, the main stairways, which Dameron had included inside the structure, were moved to the exterior in order to allow for greater room inside the main, second-floor courtroom. The structure then remain unchanged, except for the installation of a new bell and various maintenance updates, until 1929. In that year, the County Court authorized $42,000 for a new addition to the south end of the courthouse, and an updating of the rest of the building.

Additions in 1929

As a part of the 1929 renovations, Dameron’s original bell-shaped cupola and its second and third tower-tiers were removed. Using Dameron’s tower’s first tier as a base, the new design added two octagonal tiers, neither of which were as wide as the original Dameron first tier. The new second tier was approximately the same height as Dameron’s old second tier, but instead of the Jeffersonian-inspired Georgian closed shutters, a traceried lunette was added on four sides of the octagonal tier. The lunette did, however, utilize the Roman-arch keystone motif from Dameron’s Palladian windows to connect the new with the old. The new third tier was only about a fourth of the height of the new second tier, and it served primarily as a base for the most dramatic change in the tower: the addition of an octagonal, shuttered belfry. The new element was designed to the make the overall height of the tower greater. Surmounting the belfry was a New England-style octagonal, copper spire that was topped by a spear-shaped copper finial and simple weathervane. Both the new belfry and the new spire included Dameron’s guilloche-patterned carving. In addition, the 1929 renovations saw the balcony which had been constructed in 1870 when the staircases had been moved to the exterior portico restored to the central, second-floor doorway, and the stairs were moved back into the interior.

Annex added in 2000

Following the 1929 renovations, no major changes occurred to the Courthouse for seventy-two years. Then, in 2000, the Hawkins County government, now faced with burgeoning Kingsport suburbs in its eastern sections, had once again outgrown its courthouse. To accommodate the growth, the Hawkins County Commission (successor to the 1836 justices and 1929 County Court) purchased, remodeled, and restored the Mitchell Building (located just to the east of the Courthouse and built 1841) to serve as an Annex to the Courthouse for more courtrooms and for county office and archive space. As a part of these renovations, the exterior, eastern wall of the Courthouse was breached on its first and second floors in order to accommodate a glass-enclosed breezeway designed to connect the two buildings and provide elevator access for the Courthouse’s second floor (via an elevator in the Mitchell Building).

The courthouse today

Today, the Hawkins County Courthouse and its annex remain the home of all county courts and county offices, except for the Jail, Sheriffs Department, and County Mayor’s office. County government is still carried on here each month when the County Commission meets in the second-floor courtroom. And the Hawkins County Courthouse, having continuously served as the seat of county government for one hundred and seventy-one years, is the oldest Courthouse in Tennessee still used for that purpose.

Today the Courthouse houses the General Sessions, Circuit, and Chancery Courts of Hawkins County; hosts numerous administrative county offices; and serves as the meeting place for the county legislative body, the Hawkins County Board of Commissioners.

National Register of Historic Places

The Courthouse is not listed as an entry on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places (though the Rogersville Main Street program is presently working with the Hawkins County Mayor's Office to have the Courthouse added), but it is a constituent part of the Rogersville Historic District; as such, it is an historically-significant part of the reason that the District was itself included on the National Register.

References

* Goodspeed, "History of East Tennessee." (Knoxville: 1887).
* Price, Henry, "Old Rogersville: An Illustrated History of Rogersville, Tennessee." Vol. I. (Rogersville: 2001). pp. 32-45.
* Price, Henry, "Hawkins County: A Pictorial History." (Rogersville: 1996).


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