Inscription
Navarro County was created in 1846 by an act of the first Texas Legislature. It was named for early statesman Jose Antonio Navarro (1795-1871), a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence. The first county seat was established at the home of William R. Howe, an early settler on the Chambers Creek in present-day Ellis County.
In 1848, Corsicana was designated the seat of government, and temporary offices were set up in the home of pioneer Hampton McKinney. The second temporary courthouse for Navarro County was a log cabin located on the corner of West First Avenue and Twelfth Street. A second courthouse, built at this site in 1853, burned in 1855, requiring the construction of a third building.
In 1880, Austin architect F. E. Ruffini designed a fourth courthouse for Navarro County. The elaborately ornate building proved too small for the needs of the growing county, and a shifting foundation caused the structure to be condemned in 1904. The present courthouse was designed by architect J. E. Flanders of Dallas.
Constructed of red Burnet granite and gray brick, it was completed in 1905. The Beaux Arts Classical Revival structure features a clock dome and a pedimental entryway with free-standing Ionic columns. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1983
Location
Sources
More markers in Navarro
Capt. Charles Henry Allyn
Corsicana, TX
New York native Charles Henry Allyn (1842-1918) came to Texas in 1868, after having served as a captain in the Union army during the...
Site of the First Courthouse
Corsicana, TX
The Texas Legislature specified that the seat of Navarro County should be called Corsicana; but the location was not secured until 1848,...
The First National Bank of Corsicana
Corsicana, TX
An institution whose history reflects rise of a landmark city.
Samuel R. Frost
Corsicana, TX
(Mar. 1, 1846 - Jan. 1, 1908) A native of Huntsville, Texas, Samuel R. Frost grew up in Navarro County and in 1863 enlisted in the...
Near Site of Trading Post of Dr. George Washington Hill
Dawson, TX
(1814-1860) Dedicated frontier physician and public servant to the Republic and State of Texas.
