Tag Archive: courthouse

Log Courthouse – Danville, Kentucky

Log Courthouse - Danville, Kentucky

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This rustic log cabin, was used by Kentucky pioneers as the first district courthouse, prior to statehood and the split from Virginia. Located in Danville, the courthouse was staffed by prominent early Kentuckians. Samuel McDowell, John Floyd, and George Muter served as the court’s first judges. Walker Daniel, the man for whom Danville is named, was the prosecutor and John May served as the court clerk.

Today, the courthouse stands in Danville’s Constitution Square, the location of prominent early buildings including a meetinghouse, post office and jail which served vital roles in administering the terrority an young state of Kentucky.

It is also the site where numerous constitutional conventions were held to hammer out the details of Kentucky’s first constitution. The state’s first constitution was accepted by the United States Congress on June 1, 1792, making Kentucky the fifteenth state.

Anderson County Courthouse – Lawrenceburg, Kentucky

Anderson County Courthouse - Lawrenceburg, Kentucky

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A view of a the Anderson County Courthouse in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. The statue in the foreground is of a Confederate soldier, built in 1894, and erected by Kentucky Women’s Monumental Association, a predecessor of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.

The two story courthouse was constructed between 1860-61 of Kentucky River rock, and limestone, and substantially rebuilt following a fire in 1915. The building houses the County Circuit Court and County District Court of the 53rd Judicial District.