Hood County Courthouse Historic District

Hood County Courthouse Historic District

Hood County Courthouse
Location Courthouse Sq., bounded by Bridge, Pearl, and Houston Sts., Granbury, Texas
Coordinates 32°26′33″N 97°47′1″W / 32.44250°N 97.78361°W / 32.44250; -97.78361Coordinates: 32°26′33″N 97°47′1″W / 32.44250°N 97.78361°W / 32.44250; -97.78361
Area 12 acres (4.9 ha)
Built 1891
Architect Wesley Clark Dodson (W.C. Dodson); contractors: Moodie & Ellis
Architectural style Late Victorian, Second Empire
NRHP Reference # 74002080
Added to NRHP June 05, 1974

The Hood County Courthouse Historic District in Granbury, Hood County, Texas encompasses 12 acres of land and 12 contributing properties. The principal building in and the focal point of the district is the historic Hood County Courthouse built in 1890-1891. Other major buildings include the 1885 Hood County Jailhouse, the 1885 First National Bank Building, the 1891 building which now houses the Hood County News, the 1893 Aston-Landers Saloon Building,[1] the 1893 Nutt Brothers Building and the 1886 Granbury Opea House. On June 5, 1974, the district was added to the National Register of Historic Places. The nomination form called it "one of the most complete nineteenth century courthouse squares in Texas."[2] [3]

Hood County Courthouse

The historic Hood County Courthouse is located in the block bounded by East Bridge Street on the north, North Crockett Street on the east, East Pearl Street on the south and North Houston Street on the west and has an entrance on each side except the north one. It is the fifth courthouse building to occupy this site and was built of Brazos limestone by contractors Moodie and Ellis between 1890 and 1891. It was designed in the Second Empire style by noted Texas courthouse architect Wesley Clark Dodson of Waco (1829-1914). The building features 3 main stories plus an attic floor under an elaborate mansard roof system. The imposing 3-story central clock tower completed after the rest of the building required reinforcement in 1969. In 2000 the exterior of the building was restored. In 2008 a grant was received to restore the interior including restoring the district courtroom to its original 2-story configuration. [4] [5]

Nellie Gray Robertson, first female county attorney in Texas, was elected to the post for Hood County in 1918, and practiced in the courthouse building. [6]

References

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