
Gasconade County Courthouse - Centennial - Hermann, MO
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 38° 42.434 W 091° 26.186
15S E 635951 N 4285448
Courthouse was built 1897-1898...and completion date was used...
Waymark Code: WM136T0
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 09/29/2020
Views: 3
County of courthouse: Gasconade County
Location of courthouse: 1st St., up on hill, Hermann
Architect: J.B. Legg & A.W Elsner
Neo-Classical/Victorian Eclectic
I cannot find an specific web site or information about this capsule, what is in it or otherwise...
Text:
COURTHOUSE CENTENNIAL
TIME CAPSULE
DECICATED MAY 31, 1998
GASCONADE COUNTY
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
[Arrow pointing down]
"119 East 1st Street, Gasconade County Courthouse, J.B. Legg/A.W. Elsner, architects, 1896-98,
Contributing (survey #13)
Outbuilding/other: Cannon, contributing object, Stone staircase, contributing structure
Two-story Neo-Classical brick courthouse with raised stone foundation. The projecting
center entrance bay is clad in limestone. Three round arched entrance doors are approached
by wide stone steps. The second story of the entrance is an open gallery that has paired
Corinthian columns supporting an elaborate, dentiled pediment. To either side of the
entrance are brick wings with flat topped 1/1 windows on the first floor and round arched
windows with half round transoms and elaborate keystones on the second. A dentiled
cornice extends across the wings and around the secondary elevations. At each corner are
slightly projecting towers topped by domes. Centered in the building's hipped roof is a large
domed cupola with pedimented window openings. The courthouse sits on a high hill
overlooking downtown and is accessed by a massive set of limestone stairs leading to the
front entrance. At the top of the stairs is a cast metal cannon sitting on a decorative
limestone base." ~ NRHP Nomination Form
"Built in 1897-8 from designs supplied by
architects J.B. Legg of St.Louis and A.W. Elsner
of Jefferson City. The construction was financed
from a gift of local businessman and phlanthrapist
Charles W.Eitzen. A Fire in Feb. of 1905 caused
extensive damage. The interior of the building remains remarkably unchanged." ~ DNR Historic Survey PDF page 33