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Dateline: July 3, 2003 Courthouse re-dedication planned
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise The
scaffolding is down, and workers are busy putting the final touches on the
restoration of the 1890 Donley County Courthouse to be ready for this
Friday’s Saints’ Roost Celebration. “I
think we’re going to make it,” said Daniel Ledbetter, job
superintendent with Phoenix I Restoration. “They’re working really
hard to get done.” The
job will be 92 to 95 percent complete for the re-dedication of the
Panhandle’s oldest operating courthouse. Some
items just won’t be ready though. The judge’s bench will not be
completed, but its façade will be in place to give visitors an idea of
what it will look like. The ornamental finials won’t be ready for the
roof, and some exterior stonework will not be completed. Painting
and carpeting is expected to be finished this week. The stain glass
window, which is being restored in Waco at press time, is expected to be
returned to Clarendon and installed before Friday, and the tiled hearths
of the fireplaces are also slated to be finished. It
is widely anticipated that the courthouse re-dedication will be the
highlight of this year’s celebration. The ceremony will start at 9:30
a.m., July 4, on the east side of the square. “This
dedication will be as much a tribute to the generosity of the various
donors that made this project possible as it will be a celebration of our
country’s history,” said County Judge Jack Hall. Dignitaries
scheduled to participate in the ceremony include US Rep. Mac Thornberry
(R-Clarendon), State Rep. Warren Chisum (R-Pampa), and Texas Historical
Commission Executive Director Larry Oaks. Donley
County Historical Commission Chair Jean Stavenhagen will give a history of
the courthouse, and remarks will also be given by project administrator
John Kiehl of the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission, Phoenix I
president Dale Sellers, and architect Chris Hutson. The
Donley County Historical Commission will also hold a drawing to give away
an original oil painting of the courthouse by James Ivey Edwards. The $4.2 million restoration of the Donley County Courthouse was funded by the State of Texas, Donley County taxpayers, and the generous donations of several foundations, businesses, families, and individuals. For more about the project, visit www.ClarendonOnline.com and click on the courthouse logo. |
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Copyright © 2003, The Clarendon Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.