Inscription
Territorial Governor Lewis Cass established Shiawassee County in 1822, but as there were few white settlers in the area, its government was not organized until 1837. Two years later, the county commissioners designated this site in the village of Corunna as the public square. County offices occupied temporary facilities here until 1851, when a brick courthouse was built.
It was replaced in 1903-04 by the present structure, designed by Claire Allen and costing seventy-five thousand dollars. The cornerstone was laid on May 4, 1904, before the largest gathering in the county’s history. The courthouse, with its elegant clock tower and columned facade, still houses most of the major county offices.
Location
Sources
More markers in Shiawassee
Hazelton
New Lothrop, MI
In 1849 the state of Michigan gave Porter Hazelton over six thousand acres of land in what soon became Hazelton Township.
Corunna Public Schools
Corunna, MI
The Corunna School District was organized in 1842.
Knaggs Bridge Area
Bancroft, MI
Oral traditions of the Anishinaabek and archaeological evidence show people living here for thousands of years.
Methodist Episcopal Church
New Lothrop, MI
In February 1889 the Methodist Episcopal Church of New Lothrop was organized.
Ellen May Tower
Byron, MI
The daughter of Civil War Captain Samuel and Sarah Tower, Ellen May Tower was born May 8, 1868, in Byron.
