
Burlington County Courthouse - Mount Holly, NJ
N 39° 59.773 W 074° 47.332
18S E 518023 N 4427358
This old court House was built in 1796 and modeled after Congress Hall in Phila. It was used full-time until 1959 when a new County office building was opened which included court facilities. The courthouse continues to handle judicial proceedings.
Waymark Code: WMA7GC
Location: New Jersey, United States
Date Posted: 11/28/2010
Views: 5
This is one of the older and more beautiful contributing structures in this historic district. The bell tower up top is one of its well-known and principle characteristics. The bell came from the original Burlington Court House which was built in 1693, almost 100 hundred years earlier. It was cast in England in 1755 and reportedly rung to signal news of the Declaration of Independence as well as faithfully announcing the opening of Court sessions up to 1959, when the major courts were transferred to the newly built County Building on Water Street.
After the first courthouse fell into disrepair, nearly a century later, three men, Joseph Budd, Richard Cox, and Zachariah Russell, commissioned a new courthouse that was erected in the town of Mount Holly. Samuel Lewis, who worked on the similarly styled Congress Hall in Philadelphia, served as the master carpenter for the project that came into fruition in 1796. The building date can be found inside the pediment and painted black, all original. The first two numbers are separated from the alter two numbers by a fan light in the middle of this pediment.
Two plentiful, regional materials, marble and brick, compose the building's exterior facade. The brick building was initially decorated with white trim, typical of the Georgian style; later, the brick was painted white and the trim was changed to dark green. An octagonal open cupola crowns the two-story building and houses a bell that was cast in England in 1755. The inclusion of the cupola, a balustrade, decorative detailing along the roofline, an elliptical dormer window, and the building's symmetrical plan identify the courthouse as Federal in style. In America, Federal architecture traditionally denotes power and wealth, and in the case of the Burlington County Courthouse, the aim was most likely that these characteristics would be attributed to the county as a whole.
Many architectural features of the Burlington County Courthouse reflect its Federal style, a refined variation of Georgian style. The five equally spaced upper-story windows, for example, are positioned directly above their counterparts below, resulting in a balanced appearance. A belt course externally divides the two stories. Each of the courthouse's large windows is adorned with shutters, in accordance with the Federal style.
Across the lower-story on the front face of the building, two large round-headed windows evenly flank the central doorway and a marble coat of arms is displayed within a classical pediment. With its narrow sidelights, pilasters, thin frame, and elegant ornamentation, the entrance serves as a focal point for the courthouse. The fanlight above the doorway further emphasizes this area of interest.
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