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Ashtabula County Courthouse Group

Ashtabula County Courthouse Group
Ashtabula County Courthouse Group.jpg
Ashtabula County Courthouse 440-576-9090
Ashtabula County Courthouse Group is located in Ohio
Ashtabula County Courthouse Group
Ashtabula County Courthouse Group is located in the US
Ashtabula County Courthouse Group
Location Jefferson, Ohio
Coordinates 41°44′19″N 80°46′12″W / 41.73861°N 80.77000°W / 41.73861; -80.77000Coordinates: 41°44′19″N 80°46′12″W / 41.73861°N 80.77000°W / 41.73861; -80.77000
Area 10 acres (40,000 m2)
Architectural style Italianate and Queen Anne
NRHP Reference # 75001316
Added to NRHP 1975-06-30

Ashtabula County Courthouse Group is a registered historic district in Jefferson, Ohio, listed in the National Register on 1975-06-30.

The Ashtabula County Courthouse Group is a cluster of buildings built at various times in the history of the county. The center of the district and the oldest building is the 1850 courthouse designed in the popular Italianate style so prevalent in the Victorian era. The courthouse was once the only building in this group, but the increasing population and confined spaces forced the county to develop the area into a judicial and administrative campus.

Ashtabula County was settled around 1796 and was part of the Connecticut Western Reserve of the Northwest Territory. The county was officially established by the Ohio General Assembly in 1807 with the county seat located in Jefferson. A courthouse was constructed around the same time and was completed in 1811. The building was two stories high and was a simple brick structure. This building lasted until 1836 when it was razed for the construction of a new courthouse.

The second courthouse was designed by architect Willis Smith from Kinsman. The structure is basically the same in appearance as the courthouse still standing. A fire burnt some of the structure in 1850 and it was rebuilt mostly true to the original design, although the dormers piercing the roofline were removed. It was around this time that the row house known as Lawyers Row was built.

The growing population soon demanded a more spacious courthouse and instead of demolishing the 1850 courthouse, a new one was built to house the probate court in 1870, while the county courts and administration remained in the old courthouse.

In 1960 the county was again faced with the challenge of providing more room for the county government. The county decided on building a new structure. This new courthouse is a glass and masonry building with a Justice Center addition built in the 1970s.


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