- Talbot County Courthouse
Infobox Historic building
name = Talbot County Courthouse
caption =
map_type =
latitude = 38.7749
longitude = -76.0766
location =
location_town =Easton, Maryland
location_country =United states of America
architect = Cornelius West
client =Talbot County, Maryland
engineer =
construction_start_date = 1794
completion_date =
date_demolished =
cost = £3,000
structural_system =
style = Georgian
size = The Talbot County Courthouse is located at 11 North Washington StreetEaston, Maryland . The courthouse houses the chambers and courtrooms for the judge of the Circuit Court forTalbot County , as well as the clerk's offices, jurors' assembly room, the master's office and the offices of the Talbot County Council .History
In 1709, two acres of land as "Armstrong's old field, near Pitte's bridge was designated by a group of leading citizens to be the cite of the new court house. Philemon Hemsley oversaw the construction of the building which was twenty feet by thirty feet in size. The new courthouse was finished in 1712 but 60 years later the county had out grown it. An act of the Maryland General Assembly in 1789 authorized the building of and most of the funds for a newer and larger courthouse at the site of the old one. [cite book|last=Ludlow|first=Cynthia Beatty|title=Historic Easton: Its History and Architecture|accessdate=2008-05-16] The courthouse was razed and replaced with a new structure by 1794. This new and present courthouse was remodeled in 1958 which included removal of the front porch and the addition of two wings. The left wing, which once housed the District Court of Maryland for Talbot County and the Office of the State's Attorney for Talbot County, now houses the Talbot County Council chambers.
Controversey
During the
Civil War , Judge Richard Bennett Carmichael was a presiding circuit court judge for Kent, Queen Anne, Caroline, and Talbot counties. In November 1861, federal officials arrested three men charged with interfering with the election process after they heckled Unionists at a rally. Opposed to the arbitrary arrests and abuse of civil liberties, Carmichael instructed grand juries to indict the persons who made or abetted such arrests. As a result, Secretary of StateWilliam Seward ordered Judge Carmichael's arrest. [cite web|url=http://teachingamericanhistorymd.net/000001/000000/000016/html/t16.html|title=Suspension of Civil Liberties in Maryland: |last=Scharf|first=J. Thomas|publisher=Maryland State Archives|accessdate=2008-05-16] On May 27, 1862, Union Army General John Adams Dix in turn, issued orders for the arrest of Judge Carmichael, now suspected of being a southern sympathizer. More than 125 deputies and soldiers surrounded the courthouse, two of them entered the courtroom and seized Carmichael. A man named John L. Bishop beat Carmichael over the head with his pistol until the judge was unconscious. Carmichael was dragged out of the courtroom and taken by steamer toFort McHenry . Six months later he was released without ever being charged or tired for any crime. [cite journal|last=Talbot Co. Circuit Court archive|title=Arrest of Judge Carmichael|publisher=Unknown|location=Talbot County Courthouse, Easton, Maryland|accessdate=2008-05-16]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.