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From our January 4, 2001,
edition.
County
to decide look of restored courthouse
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
commissioners’ court will decided what a restored Donley County
Courthouse is going to look like next Monday.
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County
Commissioners will be deciding which style seating will be put in
the district courtroom as part of a $2.9 million restoration of the
1890 building. The bench in front is one of the original fixtures.
The theater seats behind it are some that were installed circa 1913.
And the church pews in the background is the seating used today.
Enterprise
Digital Photo. |
Deliberations
will focus on the orientation of courtroom. According to local
recollections, the room was originally situated with the judge’s bench
in the north. Physical evidence in the courtroom supports this theory, but
for most of the building’s history the bench has been in the south.
Also
at issue will be the seating in the courtroom. Last month, project
architect Chris Hutson pulled some of the old wooden theatre seats from
the courthouse attic. But this was not the original seating. He also found
a bench, similar to a park bench with a folding seat. Records indicate
that these original benches from the courtroom were sold to the Goldston
School in 1912.
Hutson
says going with the original benches may be cheaper since another
courthouse project in the state is having similar benches recreated at the
same time. However, the theatre style seats are more attractive, and many
of them are in the attic.
When
commissioners meet on Monday, they also will be determining what time
period the building should be restored to as required by the Texas
Historical Commission. Based on previous decisions, that date will be
prior to 1914. Whether they shoot for 1913 or 1912 will be decided in
large part on what seating is chosen for the courtroom.
Once
the target date is set, decisions regarding paint colors, lighting
fixtures, etc., will be made in accordance with that time period.
In
other courthouse project news, Hutson says his company, the Austin-based
Volz & Associates, may be on the trail of the quarry where stones for
the 1890 building were raised. A stonecutter in Colorado has led the
architects to a quarry in Kansas – a quarry known to have sent large
amounts of stone to Texas in the late 1880s and early 1890s. Hutson wants
the stone tested to make sure it won’t have the same problems that
currently plague the stones in the courthouse.
The
county has also discovered a second hidden fireplace. The first had been
found sealed up in the elevator shaft on the second floor, and this new
one was in a corresponding place on the first floor. Hutson says plans are
to take the fireplaces apart and use them to restore or rebuild other
fireplaces in the building.
Officials
say the courthouse project is on schedule, and the county is tentatively
scheduled to advertise for bids on the abatement of asbestos and bat guano
in a couple of weeks. Bids for construction are expected to be let in late
March with construction slated to start in April.
A
target date of April 22, 2002, has been set to complete the project.
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