But the court outgrew the tavern, and a new courthouse was built. It too was outgrown and torn down. The third courthouse on the spot was the so-called "Red Brick" courthouse, shown in this picture. It still stands, obviously, but later a fourth courthouse was built. It's where the court meets today, but the modern building isn't as picturesque as the red brick one.
Friday, March 30, 2012
The Montgomery County Courthouses
My first book talk is scheduled, appropriately enough, for Law Day, May 1, at the Montgomery County Courthouse. I say appropriately because two of Yarrow's owners were chief clerks of the court. Indeed, Brooke Beall was the first clerk and was succeeded by his son Upton. Initially, the court met at Hungerford's Tavern. The plaque at right, which is on the side of a bank, marks the spot where the tavern once stood.
Although in modern times Montgomery County has gained a reputation for being somewhat of a liberal bastion, this wasn't always the case. As detailed in From Slave Ship to Harvard, when the county was created in 1776, its residents were tobacco planters, and their slaves worked the fields. But tobacco wore out the land, and more traditional crops had to be planted. Yet the old planter mentality held sway for generations. Because of this, during the Civil War, young men from Montgomery County went South to enlist in the Confederate Army. As a result, on the left side of the Red Brick Courthouse is a statue of a Confederate soldier, looking South. Erected by surviving Southern sympathizers, the statue stands on a base with an inscription that shows the old planter mentality was still alive in the county as late as 1913.
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