Knox County Courthouse (Tennessee) Explained

Knox County Courthouse
Location:Knoxville, Tennessee
Coordinates:35.9608°N -83.9169°W
Built:1886, additions 1919
Added:April 24, 1973
Refnum:73001803

The Knox County Courthouse is a historic building located at 300 Main Street in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States.[1] [2] Built in 1886, it served as Knox County's courthouse until the completion of the City-County Building in 1980, and continues to house offices for several county departments. John Sevier, Tennessee's first governor, is buried on the courthouse lawn. The courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architecture and its role in the county's political history.[3]

Design

The courthouse is a 2.5-story brick structure with an imposing clock tower. It contains a mixture of architectural styles, including Colonial elements in the clock tower and Gothic elements (including quatrefoil patterns) in the balcony and porch. Much of the interior has been altered.

History

The Knox County Courthouse sits on what was originally Lot 36 of Charles McClung's 1791 plat of Knoxville.[4] The lot across the street to the north (Lot 37), currently occupied by the federal courthouse, was the lot set aside by James White for the county courthouse. The county's first courthouse was completed circa 1793, but was considered an eyesore.[5] Thomas William Humes stated that a "frolicsome Irishman" burned this first courthouse down within a few years of its construction, to the delight of the city's residents. The lot of the current courthouse was originally occupied by a federal blockhouse made famous by a Lloyd Branson painting.

Knox County's second courthouse was built about 1797. This second courthouse was the setting for the George Washington Harris short story, "Eaves-Dropping a Lodge of Free-Masons." Harris described the "old stone Court-house" as having a "steep gable front to the street," a "disproportionately small brick chimney," "well-whittled door-jambs," "dusty windows," and "gloomy walls and ghosly echoes."[6] By the 1830s, this courthouse had deteriorated, and local politicians began calling for its replacement.

Construction on Knox County's third courthouse began in 1839, and was completed in 1842. This third courthouse was a Federal-style structure with Greek Revival elements, and was constructed by John Dameron and Drury P. Armstrong.[7]

Construction of the fourth Knox County Courthouse began in 1884.[8] The lot across the street from the third courthouse, then occupied by a large hotel known as the Mansion House, was purchased. The county hired Stephenson and Getaz, a local contractor and architect, to build the courthouse.[9] This firm used drawings prepared by the New York architectural firm, Palliser and Palliser.[10] Built at a cost of $82,000.00, this new courthouse was considered fireproof, and included a 2,500-pound bell. Wings (running parallel to Main Street) were added to the east and west sides in 1919.

In 1980, Knox County courts and many county government functions moved to the newly completed City County Building on Hill Avenue. In subsequent years, after talk surfaced of tearing the courthouse down, a movement led by Knox County Executive Dwight Kessel convinced the county to preserve it. The building continues to house several county offices, including the office of the county clerk.[11]

Cultural references

The Hank Williams Jr. song "Knoxville Courthouse Blues" refers to the courthouse.[12]

Cormac McCarthy's 1965 novel, The Orchard Keeper, includes a scene in which one of the characters carries a dead chickenhawk into the courthouse, for which he is paid a $1 bounty.[13] McCarthy also mentions the courthouse in his 1979 novel, Suttree, likening the sound of its bell to "a fogwarning on some shrouded coast."[14]

Monuments

Tennessee's first governor, John Sevier (1745 - 1815), was originally buried in the Mississippi Territory where he died while surveying what would eventually become the Alabama-Georgia border. In 1889, a delegation led by Tennessee Governor Robert Love Taylor had Sevier's remains extracted and reinterred in the lawn of the Knox County Courthouse.[15] [16] [17] A monument was placed on the grave in 1893.[18] In 1922, a movement led by former Knoxville Mayor Samuel Heiskell managed to reinter the remains of Sevier's second wife, Catherine "Bonny Kate" Sherrill Sevier, next to her husband. In 1946, a Sevier descendant, Mary Headman, placed a marker on the lawn honoring Sevier's first wife, Sarah Hawkins.

Other monuments include the marble arched structure dedicated to Dr. John Mason Boyd (1833 - 1909), which faces the Gay Street/Main Street intersection, and stone monuments commemorating the site of the 1790s-era federal blockhouse, Knoxville's status as the first capital of Tennessee, and the 1791 signing of the Treaty of Holston. Another monument, "The Hiker," was erected by the county's Spanish–American War veterans in memory of their fellow soldiers, sailors and marines who died in the conflict. Two Tennessee Historical Commission markers recall the Treaty of Holston and the third, or "Old Knox County (1842–1886) Courthouse," which was located across from the present courthouse on Main Street.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Isenhour, Judith Clayton. Knoxville - A Pictorial History. (Donning, 1978).
  2. Knoxville: Fifty Landmarks. (Knoxville: The Knoxville Heritage Committee of the Junior League of Knoxville, 1976).
  3. Ellen Beasley, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Knox County Courthouse, 2 November 1972.
  4. Mary Rothrock, The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), map facing page 36.
  5. Harvey Broome, Mary Rothrock (ed.), "Knox County Government, 1792 - 1860," The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), pp. 52-53, 68-69.
  6. George Washington Harris, " Eaves-Dropping a Lodge of Free-Masons," Sut Lovingood: Yarns Spun By a Nat'ral Born Durn'd Fool (New York: Dick and Fitzgerald, 1867, p. 114.
  7. James Patrick, Architecture in Tennessee, 1768-1897 (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1981), p. 131.
  8. Harvey Broome, Mary Rothrock (ed.), "Knox County Government, 1860 - 1900," The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), p. 160.
  9. Ann Bennett, "Historical and Architectural Resources in Knoxville and Knox County, Tennessee," National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, May 1994, Section E, p. 27.
  10. John Shearer, "Plan to Replace Windows in Historic Knox County Courthouse," Knoxville News Sentinel, 17 July 2009. Retrieved: 18 October 2011.
  11. http://www.knoxcounty.org/clerk/index_new.php County Clerk - Knox County, Tennessee
  12. Matthew Everett, "Knoxville on the Record: A Survey of Pop, Country, and Rock Songs," Metro Pulse, 27 January 2010. Accessed at the Internet Archives, 5 October 2015.
  13. Cormac McCarthy, The Orchard Keeper (Random House, 1965), p. 78.
  14. Cormac McCarthy, Suttree (Vintage, 1992), p. 168.
  15. Book: Taylor, James P., Alf A. Taylor, and Hugh L. Taylor. Life and Career of Senator Robert Love Taylor. 1913. The Bob Taylor Publishing Co. Nashville, TN. 234.
  16. Mary Rothrock, The French Broad-Holston Country (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), pp. 486-487.
  17. Francis Marion Turner, Life of General John Sevier (Neale Publishing Company, 1910), p. xiii.
  18. John Wooldridge, George Mellen, William Rule (ed.), Standard History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1900; reprinted by Kessinger Books, 2010), p. 555.