Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fairfield County Courthouse (Ohio) Fayette County Courthouse (Ohio) First Hancock County Courthouse; Franklin County Courthouse (1840–1884) Franklin County Courthouse (1887–1974) Franklin County Government Center; Fulton County Courthouse (Ohio)
Carroll County Courthouse (Ohio) Chardon Courthouse Square District; Clinton County Courthouse (Ohio) Columbiana County Courthouse; Joseph P. Kinneary United States Courthouse; United States Post Office and Courthouse (Columbus, Ohio) Coshocton County Courthouse; Crawford County Courthouse (Ohio) Cuyahoga County Courthouse
Courthouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Ohio (52 P) Pages in category "Courthouses in Ohio" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
Ohio's municipal and county courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and courts of record. The first municipal court was created in 1910, and county courts were created in 1957 as a replacement for justice courts. In 2014, there were 129 municipal courts and 35 county courts. [2]
Courts of Ohio include: State courts of Ohio The Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center in Columbus, headquarters of the Supreme Court of Ohio. Supreme Court of Ohio [1] Ohio District Courts of Appeal (12 districts) [2] Ohio Court of Claims [3] Ohio Courts of Common Pleas [4] Ohio Municipal Courts [4] Ohio County Courts [4] Ohio Mayor's Courts
The Montgomery County Courthouse (MCC), built in 1847, is a historic Greek Revival building located in Dayton, Ohio.It is referred to locally as the Old Courthouse.The limestone building, modeled on the 5th century BC Temple of Hephaestus in Athens, Greece, is the nation's best surviving example of a Greek Revival-style courthouse.
The Huron County Courthouse and Jail is located by a busy downtown intersection in Norwalk, Ohio, United States. The ground floor is composed of rusticated blocks and recessed arched windows. The entrance is reached by a flight of stairs and a protruding portico. Two small windows frame either side of the entrance.
In the summer of 1927 the old courthouse was judged to be in need of extensive repairs. The three County Commissioners, D.V. Peterson, R.L. Kreiling, and J.W. Davidson, called a mass meeting of the citizens of the county, which decided that a bond issue to build a new Court House should be voted on at the November 1927 election.