File:Old Mahoning County Courthouse, Canfield, Ohio.jpg

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English: Old Mahoning County Courthouse

HISTORICA MARKER (Side 1)

Mahoning County was created in 1846 by combining townships from southern Trumbull and northern Columbiana counties. Canfield engaged in competition with several surrounding communities for the new county seat, and its success was attributed to its central location along with the state and local political influence of Judge Eben Newton and Elisha Whittlesey, Esq., Comptroller of the United States Treasury from 1849-1857. To become the county seat, the State of Ohio required “a suitable lot and $5,000 toward public buildings.” Judge Newton donated the land and spearheaded the subscription of the state required land. Once attained, construction progressed rapidly on the Classical Revival style courthouse, completed in June 1848. The Italianate style West Wing was added in 1862, but its government status was challenged when in the early 1870s, Youngstown, by now a city, resumed its earlier challenge for the county seat.

(Continued on other side)

Canfield Historical Society The Ohio Historical Society 2003

HISTORICA MARKER (Side 2)

(Continued from other side)

To meet the challenge, Canfield hired future president of the United State James A. Garfield to defend it in the United States Supreme Court. The Court’s decision favored Youngstown thus ending Canfield’s era as the seat of Mahoning County Government. With government records removed to Youngstown, the property reverted to Judge Newton, who donated it for educational purposes. For more than four decades, the old courthouse housed both public and private schools until in 1923 public auction by the Canfield Village Board of Education dispensed with the building. Now under private ownership, the former courthouse served many commercial enterprises, including the temporary return of a County District Court. An exterior restoration in the 1960s and reconstruction of the missing bell tower returned the aging beauty to its present status as one of Ohio finest examples of pubic architecture, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Canfield Historical Society The Ohio Historical Society

2003
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/jwpearce/9567681755/
Author Jack Pearce

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by Jack W. Pearce at https://flickr.com/photos/52021147@N03/9567681755. It was reviewed on 4 December 2022 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-sa-2.0.

4 December 2022

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