Tucker County Courthouse and Jail explained

Tucker County Courthouse and Jail
Location:1st and Walnut Sts., Parsons, West Virginia
Coordinates:39.0969°N -79.6808°W
Built:1898 - 1900
Architect:Millburn, Frank P.; Baumgarner, William D.
Architecture:Renaissance, Romanesque
Added:August 23, 1984
Refnum:84003680

The Tucker County Courthouse and Jail in Parsons, West Virginia was built between 1898 and 1900 in a combination of Flemish Renaissance and Romanesque Revival styles. The red pressed-brick structure is flanked by a "jail and jailer's residence" built in 1896 in a similar style.[1]

The main courthouse was designed by architect Frank P. Milburn and built by P.O. Shrake. Milburn was a prolific designer of courthouses in West Virginia and across the southern United States. The jail was designed by Franzeim, Geisey and Faris and was built by William D. Bumgarner.[2]

The Tucker County Courthouse was established in the wake of the Tucker County Seat War (1893). The historic jail is no longer used to confine inmates. Since 2005 the Tygart Valley Regional Jail in Randolph County has also served Tucker County.[3] [4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Friends of Blackwater Canyon - The City of Parsons. 2014-04-11.
  2. National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Tucker County Courthouse and Jail. April 4, 1984 . Rodney S. Collins . National Park Service.
  3. Web site: Tygart Valley Regional Jail . January 31, 2009. 2009 . West Virginia Regional Jail and Correctional Facility Authority web site . West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety.
  4. The facility's mailing address, however, is Belington, just over the border in Barbour County.