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Central Shenandoah News

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Augusta County Courthouse Virginia Highway Marker to be Dedicated

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Augusta County issued the following announcement on July 15

The public is invited to a special dedication and unveiling of the Augusta County Courthouse Virginia Historical Highway Marker on Wednesday, July 28, beginning at 5 p.m. on the front lawn of the courthouse. The speakers for the ceremony are Chief Judge W. Chapman Goodwin, 25th Circuit, and G.L. “Butch” Wells, Vice Chairman of the Augusta County Board of Supervisors.

The Augusta County Courthouse Historical Highway Marker was approved on March 18, by the Virginia Board of Historic Resources. The Virginia Historical Highway Marker program documents facts, persons, events, and places prominently identified with the history of the nation, state, or region. The Department of Historic Resource’s purpose in erecting markers is to educate the public about Virginia’s history, not to honor, memorialize, or commemorate persons, events, or places. Because highway markers are not honorific in nature, they do not serve the same purpose as monuments, statues, memorial plaques, or war memorials. There are currently more than 2,500 markers located across the Commonwealth of Virginia. The program is among the oldest in the nation and began in 1927.

The language adopted for the metal highway marker that will be dedicated and unveiled reads:

Augusta County Courthouse

Augusta County, created by the Virginia General Assembly in 1738, was formally organized in 1745. Its original western boundary stretched “to the utmost limits of Virginia,” a claim that then extended to the Pacific Ocean. The county court first met in a log courthouse that William Beverley built on his property here. John Madison served as the county’s first clerk of court from 1745 to 1778. Prominent regional architect T.J. Collins designed the current courthouse, the fifth on this site, in the Beaux-Arts and Neo-Classical Revival styles. The building, completed in 1901, was listed on the Virginia Landmarks Register, and the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

Original source can be found here.

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