The Ida Rupp Public Library
is pleased to re-introduce the local history blog. This month’s feature is the
Ottawa County Courthouse.
The structure is typical
Richard Romanesque style. Its construction is of North Amherst, Ohio sandstone
and pink Tennessee marble. The foundation is made from local Marblehead
limestone.
The Courthouse was started in
1898 and completed in 1901. The contracted construction price was to be
$47,500. Additions and changes brought the final cost to $60,000. The addition
of steam heat and furnishings brought the total to $65,500.
A ¼ mill tax levy generated
property taxes sufficient to produce a tablet that lists the name of every
soldier and sailor who served in the American Civil War.
A lesser known but intriguing
fact is that during construction a five-ton stone fell when a cable broke
knocking Conrad Balduf to the ground. Fortunately, Balduf was not seriously
injured. The construction company presented “Coonie” with a jersey cow as he
has just lost a milk cow before this incident.
In 1974, the Courthouse was
added to the National Register of Historical Places.
For further reading, please
refer to:
Henry House, Historical Collection of Ohio.
Centennial Edition,
1902, 2 vol.
The Heritage of Port Clinton, Ohio, A Collection of Writings by Port Clinton Historians, edited by Barbara Bailey.
The Heritage of Port Clinton, Ohio, A Collection of Writings by Port Clinton Historians, edited by Barbara Bailey.