Oscoda County Courthouse facts for kids
The Oscoda County Courthouse is the county courthouse for Oscoda County, Michigan, located in Mio at 311 Morenci Ave (M-33). The courthouse is a Michigan State Historic Site and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. As of 2012[update], the courthouse operates courtrooms for the 23rd Circuit Court, 81st District Court, and Oscoda County Probate Court.
The courthouse was destroyed by a fire on the evening of May 4, 2016.
History
The land the courthouse is built on was purchased by the county in 1885 from John Randall, one of the city's founders, for $100. The courthouse was built by George E. Hunter from July 1888 to May 1889 at a cost of about $3800. Two wings housing vaults for the county clerk and treasurer were constructed in 1908. The building gained a water supply in 1891 and was electrified in 1917.
The courthouse was designated a Michigan State Historic Site on August 13, 1971, and added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 25, 1972. A Michigan State Historic Site informational marker was erected in 2001. It burned on May 4, 2016.
Architecture
The courthouse is a two-story, rectangular front-gable building. Currently clad in aluminum, the building originally had white clapboard siding. The building is fronted by a projected bay topped with a hip-roofed steeple. The entrance is fronted by a pedimented portico beneath a fanlight on the second story. One-story wings extend from both sides of the courthouse.
The courthouse was designed by architects Pratt and Koeppe in the Classical Revival style. Unlike the stone and brick courthouses commonly built at the time, the Oscoda County Courthouse is a modest wood frame building.