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The
Edgefield County Court House
A Brief History
1785 1997
Edgefield
County was created in 1785 when the Old Ninety Six District of
Upper South Carolina was divided into smaller districts, or counties,
by act of the State Legislature. Although we have been left with
little information about the selection process for a site for
the seat of government for the new district, the records which
we do have suggest that the site was chosen about the same time
as lines of the new district were laid off. It was approximately
in the center of the new district.
The property
on which the County government was to be established was originally
a forty four acre tract granted to David Burk in 1784. Of Burke
we know very little. Burke sold the tract to Drury Mims, an early
settler of Edgefield and the ancestor of the Mims family which
has contributed many prominent citizens to the county over the
centuries.
It was recorded
in the minutes of the Judges of the Edgefield Court in 1786 that
taxes were being collected from Edgefield inhabitants for the
purpose of making payment for the "public building."
During the same period, the meetings of the Judges of the Edgefield
County Court were held at the plantation of John Harris and Drury
Mims' house near the "County 'Goal' in 1786. Harris' plantation
and Mims' house were both in the immediate vicinity of where the
Public Square in now stands. Thus, apparently the county Goal
was already constructed as early as 1786.
From these
same minutes we find that the first Court House for Edgefield
County was under construction in 1788. In that year Edward Mitchel,
John Gray and John Cheney were appointed commissioners to "let
the laying the floors of the Court House with seasoned good plank
1 1/2 inch thick, 16 window shutters, 3 in each folding, 3 pannels,
2 folding pannels case in side and out with the doors lined with
1/2 inch plank, 3 pannels in a door, the two end windows sashed,
a neat stair case and banister, the whole finished in a workman
like manner out of seasoned stuf."
The Court
later ordered that bond be taken by the commissioners from Isaac
Foreman, "one of the builders of the court house," and
be filed in the Clerk's office. Later, the court ordered that
"Henry Ware be allowed his account provided it be produced
which is twenty nine pounds and four pence for building the Court
House."
In 1790 the
court ordered that the Treasurer of the county "do pay unto
LeRoy Hammond Esq. (a Judge of the Court) all such debts as may
be due to him by an assignment of Isaac Foreman for undertaking
and building part of the Court House out of the monies that he
may receive for the use of the County."
It was not
until 1792 that Arthur Simkins, a prominent early settler and
one of the Judges of the Edgefield County Court, deeded, for the
"sum of one Shilling Current money," to the Judges of
Edgefield County Court a "certain plantation or tract of
land containing two acres whereon the Court House and goal now
stand, bounded southwardly by Moses Harris, westwardly on John
Simkins all the parts adjoining on the land of the said Arthur
Simkins; also one and quarter of an acre adjoining on the south
side of the said two acres wbereon the Clerk of the said County
hath lately built a House for his office...."
Sometimes
between 1792 and 1820 a second court house was built, replacing
the earlier weatherboard structure. In 1820 this second building
was described as "a slight,
rough, inferior
building, relatively large of brick, and capable of repair."
Identical porticos with pairs of stairs were added to the east
and west front, and extensive remoldeling was specified in a contract
dated July 10, 1827. Edgefield County Commissioners Benjamin Frazier,
Christian Breithaupt, Allen B. Addison, and Whitfield Brooks,
advertised in the 1827 Augusta Chronicle in Augusta, Georgia,
that they had made the "liberal appropriation of $3,000 for
the repair and improvement of the Court House." This court
house was described in 1833 by an English visitor as "of
brick, which is a good building."
In the March
8, 1838 edition of The Edgefteld Advertiser, A.B. Addison, chairman
of the Edgefield commissioners of public buildings of Edgefield
District called for bids on construction of a new third court
house to be built of brick, 60x48 feet and of the following specifications:
'A passage running lengthwise through the lower story with three
offices on each side. The courtroom and two jury rooms to be in
upper story, and also two ranges of seats for spectators, and
a two story portico at the end."
The next mention
of the court house occurred in the minutes of the fall term of
court in 1838. Judge John Belton O'Neal was presiding. The commissioners
of public building being called upon to show cause why they should
not be indicted for neglecting to repair the jail and some of
the public offices in the court house, made the following return:
"That a contract was made with a stone mason to make certain
repairs for the meeting of this court but had not been done because
of failure of the mason to carry out his contract, but certain
other repairs had been made. In relation to public offices in
the court house, the board have only to say, that they did not
deem it proper to expend any portion of their very limited means
in their improvement as the court house was soon to be taken down
for the purpose of erecting a new one." This was signed by
A.B. Addison, chairman, and approved by John Belton O'Neal, presiding
judge.
The February
21, 1839 issue of The Advertiser announced:
The new court
house is now completed, and we invite the citizens of the District,
and strangers, to come and see it. It is a large and noble looking
building, standing on the western side of the great road leading
to the upper country, and but a few yards distant from the site
of the old court house.
The building is of brick, and 'is two stories in height. in the
lower story there are six rooms, the Sheriffs office, the Clerk's,
the Commissioner's in Equity, the Ordinary's, a Jury room, and
a small apartment adjacent to the Clerk's office. A long and spacious
passage runs between the rooms. The front of the edifice is at
eastern end, and is painted so as to resemble granite. By a noble
flight of granite steps, protected by black iron railings, the
visitor ascends into the portico, which is supported by four massy
columns. From thence he enters the court room, which is large
and spacious and contains a sufficient number of windows.
Besides the seat for the judge which is neat, and those for the
jury, there are others arranged conveniently for spectators. In
the court room there is a large semi circular table for the gentlemen
of the bar.
In the western end of the upper story there are two jury rooms,
and a small retiring room, situated immediately in the rear of
the judge's seat.
As the visitor enters the village by either of the great thoroughfares,
the Court House presents a commanding appearance and immediately
attracts his attention. In conclusion, it may be truly said that
the style of the building is chaste and that it is an ornament
to the village.
The contractor
of building this third structure was Charles Beck, who had been
earlier associated with Robert Mills commissions throughout the
South. Mills' influence on this third Edgefield Court House is
undeniable.
In 1930 the
old building was remodeled, bringing about enlargement and modernization.
The court room was expanded the width of two jury rooms by the
process of extending the building west and to the rear, the lower
floor of the extension being arranged as offices and fire proof
vaults for the clerk of court.
Another building
program was begun in 1933, which extended the main building still
further westward and to the rear, providing new offices for the
sheriff. This later program of expansion was carried on to add
to the main courthouse building a new jail with modern facilities
and a number of offices used by various government activities.
Also, a water supply and central heating plant were added during
this time.
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