In yesterday’s post I showed you the Clallam County Courthouse. Coincidentally, yesterday I went to Port Townsend and passed by the Jefferson County Courthouse, above, so you get to see the grand courthouse of our neighboring county. Built in 1892, the building is Romanesque Revival and designed by W.A. Ritchie. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.
The courthouse was built during a booming, optimistic era in Port Townsend. Its natural deep water harbor at the mouth of Puget Sound made it a perfect destination for sailing ships coming into the Pacific Northwest. Port Townsend was a key West Coast shipping center and its beautiful Victorian era buildings reflect its growing wealth.
The arrival of railroads at the southern end of Puget Sound bypassed the region and changed Port Townsend’s fortunes. Lumber and eventually shipbuilding and an arts community contributed to Port Townsend’s survival and today it’s a popular tourist hub.
Love the arch in the second photo. When I see photos like these I wish that I had an honest-to-goodness time machine so I could interview some of the former residents.
This is also a gorgeous building. I’d love to see the interiors of these places. They remind me of buildings in Minneapolis when I was a mere teen. I think most of those structures are still there but too often the old beauties are destroyed to make way for modern crapola with cupola.
A beautiful architectural style!
Gosh it really is a grand piece of architecture Kay, the arched entrance way is incroyable!
It is a beautiful building. It would fit in well in New England, though the Richardsonian buildings around here are usually rendered in brownstone.