Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail

The Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail are three buildings built in 1939. Their construction was funded by the Public Works Administration, as a project under the New Deal of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration to invest in infrastructure. They were designed by architect William J.J. Chase in Stripped Classical style.[2]

Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail
Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail is located in Georgia
Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail
Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail is located in the United States
Troup County Courthouse, Annex, and Jail
Location118 Ridley Avenue, LaGrange, Georgia
Coordinates33°2′25″N 85°1′50″W
Area1.5 acres (0.61 ha)
Built1939
Built byA.J. Honeycutt Co.
ArchitectWilliam J.J. Chase
Architectural styleStripped Classicism
MPSGeorgia County Courthouses TR
NRHP reference No.95000721[1]
Added to NRHPJune 8, 1995

LaGrange was in the news in January 2017 for the public apology of its police chief and mayor for the city's failure to prevent the 1940 lynching of Austin Callaway, a young black man.[3] Callaway was taken by a gang of white men from the jail, which presumably was this Troup County Jail.

The old Troup County Courthouse is used in the 21st century as the Juvenile Courthouse. The jail behind it was torn down in 2001 when the Troup County Government Center was built.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.