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Cass County has been under four
different names. It was known as Paschal county, under the Spanish reign,
1824 - 1836. Under the Republic of Texas, 1836 - 1846, it was known as a
part of Red River county, which at that time embraced the Red River, Cass,
Bowie, Marion Morris and Franklin territory.
When Texas was admitted to the Union in 1846, Cass county was named and
embraced Marion and Bowie counties and Jefferson was the county seat until
1852, when Linden was made the county seat.

Marion and Bowie counties were cut off from Cass county during the fifties.
The Legislature in session December 17, 1861, changed the name of Cass
county to Davis county and it was changed back to Cass county by an act of
the Legislature, May 16, 1871.
Linden was made the county seat of Cass county early in 1852, and the first
term of District court was held there, on the third Monday in September,
1852, with Judge Denson in charge.
Cass county gets its name from Senator Lewis A. Cass of Michigan who was
instrumental in getting Texas admitted to the Union. There is a Cass county
in Michigan named after the same man with a county seat by the name of
Cassopolis.
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Cass County Courthouse
National Registry
Apparently the
original frame courthouse in Linden was not regarded as suitably fireproof
and the structure was sold to a church, moved, and a brick structure was
begun in 1859 at the same site. Built of locally made brick by J. Thomas
Veal and L. W. Lisenbee, the 50' x 60' structure was not completed until
after the Civil War. Offices were located on the first floor and the
classroom and Jury rooms on the second floor.
County Judge Charles
Ames was paid $50 for drawing a plan and writing the specifications. He
specified 12' high ceilings, tongue & groove floorings, four fireplaces with
brick chimneys, three sets of double doors with lights over the doors,
sixteen windows of six over six lights for the first floor, eighteen windows
of six over six lights for the second floor, a hipped roof (girders to be 8"
x 16"), roof painte d
a lead color (indicating it must have been metal), a 10' square cupola 23'
high with a zinc covered dome, crowned with a and a 2' diameter wooden ball,
both covered with gold leaf, painted "Spanish brown" inside and outside.
The first addition
was built ca. 1900 when a 15' wing was added to the east side of the
building by B.H. Singletary of Atlanta, Texas. In 1917 a second addition
added two more wings, one on the west side and another on the east side, The
architect was Stewart Moore, from Texarkana, Texas, and the contractors were
A.M. and R.G. Brashears also from Texarkana. A fire in 1933 destroyed part
of the second floor. Damage was repaired immediately, the tin covered cupola
was removed and the third floor was added. At a later date the brick
received stucco and was painted white with deep tan trim.
The enlisting
three-story, Neo Classical Revival style courthouse is the result of the ca.
1900 remodeling. The seven-bay longitudinal elevation is basically a central
pavilion with almost symmetrical wing featuring a prominent, three-bay,
two-story pedimented entry portico. Columns are Roman Doric. The pediment
has a semi-circular fan window with lights. A red tile, hip roof with a deck
(no railing) prominently caps the structure.
Windows in the first
and second floors are 9 over 1 or 6 over 1 light, double hung windows. There
is no exterior window trim and only a slight sill. Third floor windows are 6
Light casements, typically used in pairs, but occasionally used singly. The
exterior doors on the east and west elevations are metal all-glass, double
doors with a glass transom above. The doors on the south and north sides are
wood with a glass panel. Trim on the south door is simple architrave-type
while the north door is elaborated with a triangular pediment.
Chimneys and
fireplaces are no loner present, although early photographs show chimneys
previously existed. The frieze, painted in a contrasting earth-tone, is the
main decorative element. Metopes are plain and vary in width because the
triglyphs are spaced to synchronize with spacing of fenestration and to add
emphasis to the corners of the building. Repeated remodelings have left
little material from the 1859 structure exposed. New doors have been
installed, ceilings have
been lowered from 12' to 8' with acoustical tile and recessed fluorescent
lighting fixtures, walls have been paneled, and carpet has been laid on the
concrete floor.
The Classical
Revival Cass County Courthouse, prominently located on the public square in
Linden, is the oldest continuously used courthouse in Texas. Serving as a
visual reference point that defines the to landscape, this building is a
reminder of past civic pride when the courthouse was a symbol of peace and
of the protection of society. The original brick structure, built in 1859-60
is encased on two sides by additions occurring cast the turn of the century,
in 1917, and following a fire in 1933.
The present
courthouse is actually the second courthouse built in Linden on this site,
and Linden is the second county seat of Cass County. In 1846 the original
county offices were located in Jefferson, Texas. County commissioners moved
the county seat to Linden in 1852. By 1853 a two-story, frame courthouse was
built on the same site
as
the present courthouse. Thomas J, Foster, Sr., the contractor, did the
logging and built the first pit saw and Lumber mill in Linden for the
purpose of building the courthouse. His was also the first business in town.
The 1859-60 Cass
County Courthouse precisely followed the mid-19th century formula for
courthouses given in Texas Public Buildings of the Nineteenth Century by W.
B. Robinson:
"...formal
compositions, two-story blocks, approximately thirty-two feet high, on
either square or rectangular plans. Usually the roof was hipped, the whole
composition was crowned and unified by a square or octagonal cupola. Located
in the center of the public square, the courthouse had entries, on all four
facades - giving equal prominence to commercial property on all sides,"
The courthouse was
the site of the early legal work of former Congressman Wright Patman and
former Texas Supreme Court Justice Ralph Hicks Harvey.
While many changes
to the structure have taken place over time, these changes represent the
history and development of the building and they have acquired a
significance of their own. Another addition is being planned in a manner
sympathetic to the Classical Revival style architecture that the building
took on in 1900. Neither this new addition nor previous additions should
make this building any less worthy of preservation. The building remains in
good condition and its current intense use serves the best interests of the
building itself and the community of Linden, where typically the public
square was a focus for community life and commercial activity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY ON FILE
IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER
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