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Collection: Directories and Documents > Directories

Christine Freeman Directory - Volume 1 (A-I) (332 pages)

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Court House, continued: will be forty-one feet fram the roof of the building to the top of the dome, and eighty-five feet fran the ground to the highest point. — The dame will be octagonal in shape, resting upon a square base. The first section or base will be sixteen feet ten inches square. The second section will consist of eight columns arranged as an octagon and forming the belfry. This part is fourteen feet in diameter and seventeen feet high. Upon these columns rests an ornamental section, neatly corniced and three feet high. Upon this section will rest the dome. The whole will be neatly finished and will greatly add to the beauty of the building. The Supervisors will soon be ready to receive bids for building this dome. NI February 28, 1867 p2c2: That Belfry or Cupola. Mr. Editor: From the papers it appears the Board of Supervisors of the county submit the project of placing a cupola forty-one feet high upon the top of our present elegant and costly Court House. The cost of this little ornamental affair is variously estimated at from three to five thousand dollars. Undoubtedly the finances of the county are ina healthy condition, and three or five thousand dollars is not much for the people to pay. Probably on the score of cost no objection would be raised to the building of the proposed cupola. But there are other serious considerations touching this matter. We have an excellent Court House now, which cost the county more than fifty thousand dollars. It stands firm and is without blemish. It is really a most creditable structure. — We all feel proud of it as it stands. Why not let well enough alone? If we go to tinkering the building, who knows but the roof may not come to be in the same condition as nine-tenths of all the roofs in town, letting more water in than they turn off? What power will the winds have on a cupola forty one feet high? Are the walls of the building such that the jarring of a bell and the power of the wind upon the belfry, will have no effect upon the mortar? Do we need a belfry forty one feet high, or about the height of the building itself? Do we need a cupola at all? I have conversed with dozens of men upon the subject, and have never yet met an earnest advocate of tampering with the present excellent and really handsame Court House. I believe the tax payers of the town are not in favor of attempting to patch the Court House at all, but are for letting it alone, merely putting same substantial structure on the jail, for the bell, so as to save the walls of that building. But let us hear fran the public on this subject. One of the People. NI March 2, 1867 p2c2: The Cupola For The Court House. Since the Board of Supervisors have advertised for proposals to build a cupola, the matter has been generally talked of, and many seem to think that it well not improve the building in appearance, while it may do it considerable damage. We understand that this is the opinion of Mr. Butler, the architect who planned the Court House. He thinks that the better plan would be to erect a belfry on the jail. The Board of Supervisors have taken no final action in the matter yet, and only desire to do the best that can be done for the interests of the county. The Grand Jury called the attention of the Board to the fact that the walls of the jail were being injured by the ringing of the bell, and advised the erection of a bell tower. The Board concluded the best way to provide a tower and an ornament for the building would be by the erection of the proposed cupola, adopted the plan and advertised for contracts. There is no opposition to the proposed structure on account of the cost, the only question seems to be as to its beauty and utility. The NATIONAL advocated the cupola, and after quoting a communication published in the TRANSCRIPT a few days since, in which the writer opposed the erection of a cupola, that paper says: (Long quote of the NATIONAL which concludes saying ) "Of course a belfry can be put upon the Court House by any architect fit for his business. It would greatly improve its appearance, for at present it lacks finish and the completeness which should crown it." 42