The brick Georgian Revival courthouse, the county's fourth, succeeds a building burned in the 1924 fire. Its predecessors stretch back to a structure that the first county commissioners directed to be built “of good hewed loggs,” and for which they paid $160. One would be hard pressed to claim that the current building is of great architectural significance, though its pedimented, giant-order Ionic portico manages to dominate the town square. A modest louvered belfry, square in section, with a convex roof,
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Pendleton County Courthouse
1925–1927. West side of Main St. (U.S. 220) between Walnut and Chestnut sts.
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