| Clinton County Courthouse (circa 1910) |
Construction started on the Clinton County
Courthouse in 1897. The people were feeling proud. Lumber money was flowing,
new businesses were opening, and they wanted a courthouse that showed the world
they were here to stay. The Clinton Herald promised it would
be “a structure that shall speak of the city’s permanence and progress.”
Architect G. Stanley Mansfield imagined something strong and beautiful—with thick red sandstone walls, high arches, and a copper tower that stood high above the Mississippi.
Then,
during construction, the ground gave out. The workers hit quicksand, and the
project slowed to a crawl. Arguments broke out. The costs climbed higher than
anyone had expected. A county supervisor finally sighed, “Let it be finished,
if only to stop the bleeding.”
The
building still stands. The clock ticks on, reminding people that time waits for
no one.
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