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The Fannin County Courthouse is a historic courthouse building located in Bonham, Fannin County, Texas. Built in 1888-1889 of rough-cut local limestone from Gober by Scottish-born stonemasons Kane and Cormack, it was designed in the Second Empire style of architecture by Waco -based architect Wesley Clark Dodson (1829–1914) of the firm Dodson ...
Fannin County is a county in the far northeast of the U.S. state of Texas, on the border with Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 35,662, [1] making it the 87th most populous county in Texas. [2] The entirety of Fannin County is a part of the Bonham Micropolitan Statistical Area and the Dallas-Fort Worth Combined Statistical Area.
Fannin County: 147: Bonham: 1837: Red River County: James Walker Fannin, Jr. (1805–1836), the commander of the Texans killed in the Goliad Massacre: 37,571: 892 sq mi (2,310 km 2) Fayette County: 149: La Grange: 1837: Bastrop County: Gilbert du Motier, marquis de La Fayette (1757–1834), the French-born general and hero of the American ...
Fannin County Courthouse: Bonham, Fannin County: 1889, 1965 built [221] Built in the Second Empire style by W. C. Dodson in 1889 but remodeled in 1965 in the Modern style by Buford Architects and Engineers. [221] Fayette County Courthouse: La Grange, Fayette County: 1891 built [222] [223] 1975 NRHP [224] 2001 RTHL [225] 2003–05 restored [226 ...
The Eastern District of Texas currently [citation needed] hears the most patent cases in the country and has seen an increase in the number of cases filed relating to patent infringement, notably in the courts of Judge T. John Ward in the Marshall Division, Judge Leonard Davis in the Tyler Division, and Judge David Folsom in the Texarkana ...
Fannin County Courthouse (Texas) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Fannin County Courthouse .
Mary Velma Davenport: [29] First female county judge in Texas (c. 1938) Charlye O. Farris (1953): [12] First African American female elected as a county judge pro tem in Texas (1954) Alicia R. Chacón: [30] [31] First Latino American female elected as a judge of a major county in Texas (c. 1990s)
Most district courts consider both criminal and civil cases but, in counties with many courts, each may specialize in civil, criminal, juvenile, or family law matters. [ 2 ] The Texas tradition of one judge per district court is descended from what was the dominant form of American state trial court organization for much of the 19th century ...