FIRST Municipal Building - Lewisville, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 33° 02.843 W 096° 59.731
14S E 687166 N 3658326
Placed by the Lewisville Area Chamber of Commerce and Visitors Bureau, a bronze plaque mounted on the ground in front of The Old Well House provides some history of this, the city's first municipal building, and the roles it has played over time.
Waymark Code: WM130M9
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 08/21/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member model12
Views: 0

Owing to the landscaping, this one can be difficult to see unless you're virtually on top of it. It reads:

When Lewisville was incorporated in 1925, with a population of about 850, W.W. Sherrill owned the water company that included a well, a "standpipe" or water tank, and the distribution system. Many of the surviving photos of Lewisville from that period were taken from atop the "standpipe" located near the intersection of Poydras and Elm Streets. The limited water distribution system mostly provided water to faucets in front yards for use within the house. Although the community included a scattering of farm houses for a mile or more outside the "urbanized" Lewisville, most of the town was located roughly between Charles Street and Kealy Avenue about a block or two north and south of Main Street. The town sold bonds to purchase Mr. Sherrill's water system and to build the first municipal building, this well house, constructed in 1927 for a new water well. The building, which also housed the town's fire truck, has been used over the years for a variety of city offices, including service as the police station, and was remodeled in 1996.

Although the renovation included the addition of modern improvements such as restrooms, an effort was made to give the final product a feeling of the original 1920's style interior and exterior. Paint colors inside the building were selected from those common to the period. The original tin ceiling was not salvageable, but a similar style was installed on the 12-foot ceilings. Several of the tall windows, which had been closed off or retrofitted with aluminum frames for air-conditioning, were restored to their original design. A door on the south side of the structure that had been covered over during a remodeling in the 1960's was discovered inside the wall. In addition to being refurbished for continued use, that door served as a model for the remaining doors. A 1960's era episode of the television show Route 66 filmed in Lewisville provided a brief view of the well house, showing a portico outside the south entrance. Prior to the renovation the only evidence of the portico was a small concrete slab and a deviation in the pattern of brick on the side of the building. The TV clip provided the architect, Ames Fender, enough information to redesign the feature and have it added back, much like the original. The cornerstone plaque, giving credit to Mayor Fagg and the City Council members involved in the 1927 Water Works building construction, had been salvaged during a remodeling effort many years before and was finally returned to a spot inside the reconstructed portico. A blend of original brick and new brick was used in the remodeling, expanding the unique pattern found on the 1927 walls. The most prominent feature inside the building is Lewisville’s original jail cell. Old-timers sometimes recall tense boyhood moments of being in or threatened with the riveted steel cage.

This plaque donated by the
Lewisville Area Chamber of Commerce and Visitors Bureau
2004

FIRST - Classification Variable: Item or Event

Date of FIRST: 01/01/1927

More Information - Web URL: [Web Link]

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KidWrangler visited FIRST Municipal Building - Lewisville, TX 12/11/2021 KidWrangler visited it