Cleveland County Courthouse (North Carolina) Explained

Historic Cleveland County Courthouse
Nrhp Type:cp
Nocat:yes
Location:Main, Washington, Warren, and Lafayette Sts., Shelby, North Carolina
Coordinates:35.2914°N -81.5394°W
Architect:Lewman, H.L.
Builder:Falls City Construction Co.
Architecture:Classical Revival
Added:May 10, 1979
Refnum:79001693

The Cleveland County Courthouse is a courthouse building located at Shelby, Cleveland County, North Carolina.

History

The courthouse was built in 1907, and is a three-story, rectangular, Classical Revival-style building sheathed in a smooth ashlar veneer above a rusticated first floor. It features tetrastyle Corinthian order porticoes at each of the four entrances and a three-stage cupola atop the flat roof.

In 1916, Thomas Dixon, Jr., the author of , planned to erect a statue of his uncle Leroy McAfee on the courthouse square.[1] [2] The project was initially met with enthusiasm,[1] until it was announced that Dixon wanted McAfee to wear a Ku Klux Klan mask in the statue.[2]

Courthouse offices moved to a new building in 1974, and the old courthouse houses offices, and public meeting hall. It was also home to the Cleveland County Historical Museum, which closed in 2004 and became the Earl Scruggs Center in 2014 after extensive interior renovations.[3]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. It is located in the Central Shelby Historic District.

Earl Scruggs Center

The courthouse is now home to the Earl Scruggs Center — "Music & Stories from the American South", which opened in 2014.[4] The museum focuses on both the life of local musician Earl Scruggs, and the music, history and culture of the American South. The museum also hosts concerts and music lectures.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Cleveland Cullings. September 28, 2016. The Gastonia Gazette. Gastonia, North Carolina. September 22, 1916. 7. Newspapers.com. registration . The announcement that Thomas Dixon will erect a monument on the Shelby court square to the memory of Col. Leroy McAfee is hailed with delight..
  2. News: Cleveland County Is Resenting Dixon's Plan. September 28, 2016. The Charlotte Observer. October 29, 1916. Newspapers.com. registration . Whether or no Thomas Dixon suspected that such a project would meet with spirited opposition all over his home county and as a piece of news, become circulated widely by newspapers of the South, is another matter but if Mr Dixon wants to stir up things and keep his name before the public to better advertise his productive "The Fall of a Nation", he could not have selected anything more timely. Mr Dixon proposed to erect this monument to Colonel McAfee in Shelby, the county seat of Cleveland County, where "Tommy" was "brought up" and to include a Ku Klux masque..
  3. Web site: Mary Ann Lee and Joe Mobley. North Carolina County Courthouses TR: Cleveland County Courthouse. National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . n.d.. pdf . North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2014-08-01.
  4. Web site: Earl Scruggs Center opens in a deluge. Bluegrass Today. 7 December 2014. January 13, 2014.