DeWitt County Courthouse (Illinois)
The DeWitt County Courthouse is a government building in Clinton, the county seat of DeWitt County, Illinois, United States. Completed in 1986, it is the fourth courthouse in the history of DeWitt County.
![](../I/DeWitt_County_Courthouse%252C_Clinton.jpg.webp)
Clinton's first settler, James Miller, built a store in October 1835 at the site, and the first house and hotel were those of William Anderson in the following spring. The town was platted in October 1836.[1]:151 DeWitt County was created in 1839 from pieces of Macon and McLean counties, and the town of Marion was designated the temporary county seat until the voters should choose a permanent seat;[1]:58 Clinton won the election handily. Contractor Henry Dishon oversaw the construction of a new courthouse, which he finished on September 2, 1839 at a cost of about $600.[1]:65
In 1849, this building was replaced with a larger brick structure, two stories tall and measuring 32 by 44 feet (9.8 m × 13.4 m).[1]:69 Entrances pierced the middle of the gabled facade of the narrow end and along a longer side, and a fence was placed around the building.[1]:plate facing 66 This building remained in use until the turn of the twentieth century, when a replacement was constructed. The new building was a three-story stone structure in the Gothic Revival style, which aside from the upper levels of its clock tower closely resembled the Pike County Courthouse in Pittsfield.[2]
Today, county officials operate in a modernist single-story building completed in 1986. Designed by FGM Architects, the courthouse is a long and low building with a flat roof and a partially windowless brick facade. The main entrance is placed near the building's center, and a war memorial sits in front of the eastern wing.[2]
References
- History of De Witt County, Illinois : with illustrations descriptive of the scenery, and biographical sketches of some of the prominent men and pioneers. Philadelphia: W.R. Brink, 1882.
- Weiser, Dennis. Illinois courthouses: an illustrated history. Virginia Beach: Donning, 2009, 40.