Cedar Park - Leander Edition | December 2022

GOVERNMENT Bell repairs mark latest upkeep on WilCo’s historic courthouse

BY GRANT CRAWFORD

repairs to keep the clock functional. More permanent repairs will be made soon, Shea said. The county will have spent about $1,350 on the repairs once a new part is installed, Public A”airs Manager Connie Odom said. The building has undergone interior and exterior alterations, but the county has worked to restore and maintain much of the original design’s charac- teristics. The doors, for instance, have been reˆnished, but are preserved in their authentic state. In a more expansive renovation, the 26th District Courtroom was restored to its 1910 form—a two-story court- room and balcony. In this courtroom, Williamson County District Attorney Dan Moody tried members of the Ku Klux Klan in 1924, resulting in jail time. The four convictions are believed to be the ˆrst successful prosecutions against members of the Klan. The courthouse

Several years had passed since anybody heard the bell toll at the his- toric Williamson County Courthouse in Georgetown, but on Nov. 7, it rang once again. The Williamson County Commis- sioners Court approved a resolution supporting Operation Green Light for Veterans on Nov. 3, lighting the courthouse dome on Main Street green for a week. Coinciding with the initiative, meant to highlight and show support for veterans, the county had its 111-year-old clock and bell repaired. “This is the heart of this building,” County Architect Trenton Jacobs said. Built in 1910 and opened in 1911, the ˆfth courthouse of Williamson County was constructed after the Commissioners Court and voters approved $100,000 in bonds to pay for

The dome of the Williamson County Courthouse was lit green from Nov. 713 as part of Operation Green Light for Veterans.

COURTESY WILLIAMSON COUNTY

A bell from 1911 sits on top of the Williamson County Courthouse.

The Williamson County Courthouse has a clock face on each side of the building.

GRANT CRAWFORD COMMUNITY IMPACT

KEEPING UP WITH THE COURTHOUSE

GRANT CRAWFORD COMMUNITY IMPACT

Buildings more than a century old, such as the Williamson County Courthouse, require constant maintenance and repair. County ocials have signed o on additions and repairs over the years.

the project. Over its lifespan, it has gone through renovations, repairs and routine maintenance, still serving as a focal point for Georgetown’s Town Square. The E. Howard Clock Co. in Boston provided the clock faces located in the

“WE’RE STARTING TO SEE THIS BEING A COMMUNITY CENTER, LIKE IT WAS WHEN THE CITY WAS FIRST FOUNDED.”

1910

1921: Awnings are added to the building’s west side. 1910: The current Williamson County Courthouse is constructed. 1928: Floodlights are added to the roof to light the courthouse dome. 1937: The entrance to the north basement is built by Belford Lumber Co. 1944: Handrails are added to all outside steps. 1948: Venetian blinds are installed. 1957: Window air conditioning units are installed.

framework—a calcu- lated layout designed before the use of air conditioning—also still stands. “Having this central rotunda with a dome, the hot air would come in and rise and go out

1920

WILLIAMSON COUNTY COURTHOUSE The Williamson Museum oers guided tours of the courthouse on Fridays at 1:30, 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. Each tour allows for a maximum of 20 people and lasts 45-60 minutes. To con rm tour hours and meeting place, call 512-943-1670. Williamson County Architect Trenton Jacobs (left) and Building Systems Engineer Daniel Shea stand with the clock. GRANT CRAWFORD COMMUNITY IMPACT

1930

TRENTON JACOBS, COUNTY ARCHITECT

1940

dome of the courthouse. From the time it opened in 1911 until 1940, the clock was fully mechanical. Every three days, county sta” would climb a series of ladders to wind it, but it kept perfect time, Building Systems Engineer Daniel Shea said. “It’s not pseudoscience, either,” he said. “It is an exact science.” The timekeeper was electriˆed in 1940. On the hour, a cable connecting the clock to the bell on the courthouse roof was triggered, prompting a ham- mer to strike the metal and reverber- ate. Gears in a century-old clock can only last so long, though, and several years ago, the bell stopped ringing. “Teeth scraping against each other for 100 years will take o” a 16th of an inch, and that will throw the whole mechanism o”,” Jacobs said. The county contracted with the Southwest Museum of Clocks and Watches in Lockhart to do temporary

the other windows. So it could pull from whichever direction the wind is blowing,” Jacobs said. The courthouse’s four identical sides represent equal access for the public, Jacobs said. In the middle of the rotunda Ÿoor, the star points a few degrees o” from true north. Jacobs said he found one of the star’s legs points to the Texas Capitol building. “Architects, especially in the olden days, would come up with secret and coded things to put into the buildings that would be there forever,” he said. With an increase in the number of visitors and events held at the Square, the county is undertaking a sod rejuve- nation project on the courthouse lawn. “We’re starting to see this being a community center, like it was when the city was ˆrst founded,” Jacobs said. “Back when the city was ˆrst founded, this was all dirt. So now we’re dealing with the modern need for grass.”

1950

1960

6THST. 710 S. Main St., Georgetown 512-943-1100 www.wilco.org Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Sat.-Sun.

1970

1960: A law library is added.

1978: The ceiling in the commissioners courtroom is lowered.

1980

7THST.

1981: Central air and heating is installed.

1990

8THST.

2022: The courthouse clock and bell are repaired.

2022

SOURCE: WILLIAMSON COUNTY› COMMUNITY IMPACT

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9THST.

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CEDAR PARK  LEANDER EDITION • DECEMBER 2022

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