
Clay County Courthouse
National Registry
The plan of the Clay
County Courthouse is in the form of a Greek cross with narrow arms
projecting to the north and south and wide arms projecting to the east and
west. Corridors extending through both arms of the cross provided access
from all four sides of the building which was positioned in center of the
public square. On the ground level, the wide arms of the cross contained
offices and the narrow arms contained the stairways providing access to the
courtroom which originally occupied most of the second floor.
The form and details
of the courthouse are Classical. The most noteworthy features of th e
exterior are the sandstone columns on tall pedestals projecting from each of
the eight corners, expressing the second floor as a piano mobile. The walls
of locally-manufactured red brick are accented by sandstone stringcourses.
During construction an iron cornice was substituted for the stone cornice
that was originally specified. Originally the roof was hipped on a low
pitch, creating a stronger horizontally than the new with four clock faces
surmounted by metal details was replaced early in of frame construction.
Late in the were installed--these of gable roof provides. A tall tower a
cupola and finished with sheet the twentieth century by a low dome century,
an iron fence and concrete course, have been removed and replaced. In 1891 a
fireproof record room was added and in 1893 twenty four incandescent lights
were installed (an early use in West Texas of artificial lighting).
On the interior the
offices remain essentially in their original configuration. However wall
surfaces have been refinished with pecan paneling and lower ceilings have
been installed. In recent years, along with interior alterations, many
window openings have been partially or wholly filled.
Typical of many of
those in West Texas, the Clay County Jail was a two-story masonry work with
stuccoed walls. Roman arches with emphasized imposts were employed on the
front section, which was emphasized by an asymmetrically placed gable;
elsewhere segmental arches were
used. Wall decoration consists of stringcourses, an ornamental brick cornice
and some relief on the Roman arches. Other decorative features include
corner finials and a small cupola, the latter of which was also functional.
The Clay County
Courthouse and Jail have architectural and governmental significance. The
Courthouse is distinguished by its stone details and cross-shaped plan,
which was relatively unusual in Texas. Both the courthouse and jail have
been the focus of government and law enforcement activities for nearly a
century. In addition, during the early years of its use, the Courthouse was
the location of numerous social activities of the county.
Clay County was
organized in 1857 but Indian raids later forced abandonment. In 1872 the
county was reorganized and the following year the county commissioners
ordered the construction of the first courthouse, a rectangular stone
building.
Named, according to
legend, for the wife of Henry Clay of Kentucky, Henrietta was originally
laid out in 1860. After abandonment during Indian problems the town was
reoccupied in 1865 but was once again vacated as a result of pressures from
the Indians. It was finally occupied permanently in 1873 and it was
incorporated in 1882, the year it became the permanent county seat. Located
on the Fort Worth and Denver Railroad and the Missouri, Kansas, and Texas
Railroad, it became a commercial center for the surrounding region.
Late in 1883 the
commissioners' court ordered T.J. Craig, County Judge, to advertise for
plans and specifications for a new courthouse to be erected on the public
square. After examing those submitt ed,
the plans of W.H. Wilson of Dallas were accepted. Later, another architect,
(first name unknown) Tozer, became associated with the project. On January
29, 1884, after consideration of the bids submitted, contractors D.W.
Strain, Ward Risley and A. Swinburn of Fort Worth were selected to build the
temple of justice for $34,800 and on June 24 the cornerstone was leveled by
Henrietta Lodge No. 454, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons.
As occasionally was
the case in the nineteenth century, various rooms in the courthouse served
functions outside government. In 1884 the grand jury room was rented to the
Knights of Honor for use as a lodge room. A room on the third floor was
rented as a law office and in 1886 another room was rented to the Henrietta
Silver Cornet Band for $4.00 per month. Later, however, orders were issued
forbidding the use of the courthouse for balls and dances. Then, in 1905 the
court issued an order forbidding the use of the courthouse for ice cream
parties because "the continued waste of salt and salt water on floors have
damaged to a considerable extent, as well as the sleepers under the floor. .
."
Today the courthouse
continues to serve soley the functions of county government.
In 1874 a
sixteen-foot-square jail was built with six inch wooden walls. Built of
solid oak the plan consisted of a central hall with three cells on either
side. This work is preserved in Henrietta.
However, this early
calaboose obviously proved unsatisfactory. In less than three years after
its acceptance in 1875, notices were published inviting contractors to
submit proposals for the construction of a new sandstone jail. On August 12,
1878 the commissioners' court ordered that the contract for the erection of
a county jail be let to J.L. Thomas of Fort Worth. For $7,000 the
contractor, who developed his own plans, was to build a jail with exterior
walls of pitchfaced
ashlar sandstone.
However, this jail
was not built. Finally in 1890 the Pauley Jail Building and Manufacturing
Company of Saint Louis was awarded a contract for the construction of a new
jail for $24,000. The jail was completed and accepted that same year.
Clay County
Commissioners' Court Minutes, Vols. -V Frank J. Douthitt, "Clay County
Courthouse," Texas Bar
Jornal, 34 (October
22, 1971). pp. 865-866. Fort Worth Daily Gazette, February 2, 1884, p. 6;
May 1,
1884, p. 6. Walter
Prescott Webb (ed), The Handbook of Texas, Vol. I,
Austin: The Texas
State Historical Association, 1952.
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