Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina

Oct 30, 2015 Fri0Confederate Statues

Laurie and I like riding our Gold Wing motorcycle. But it is easy to get into a rut and just ride the same roads. So to force ourselves to ride to places we would not normally visit we made a goal to visit and photograph all 100 North Carolina courthouses within 1 year.

As usual, we got a little behind. We started in July 2015 and finished 99 out of 100 by June 2018. The last courthouse was in our home county of Wake and it took us until Feb 2021 to get that final one. But we made it! This blog is about one of those visits.

Many NC courthouses were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The nomination form has some interesting facts about the various courthouse styles over the years.






Courthouse Information


Wikipedia says the following about the courthouse:

Vance County Courthouse is a historic courthouse building located at Henderson, Vance County, North Carolina. It was originally built in 1884, and extensively remodeled in 1908 by Milburn & Heister in the Neoclassical style. It is a two-story, tan brick, cross-plan building with a monumental front portico supported by brick columns.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. It is located in the Henderson Central Business Historic District.






County Information


The North Carolina History Project lists the following information for this county:

Once part of the Granville, Warren, and Franklin Counties, Vance County was established on May 5, 1881. Originally, two names were proposed in the General Assembly for the new county ---"Gilliam" and "Dortch." Yet, both of these names were dropped, and Vance County was named in honor of Governor Zebulon B. Vance, the famous Civil War Governor of North Carolina. In 1841, the town of Henderson became Vance's county seat, and it was named in memory of Leonard Henderson who served as Chief Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court in the 1830s. Epsom, Gill, Gillburg, Greystone, and Williamsboro are other townships within Vance County. Some important physical traits include the Anderson, Island, and Tabbs Creeks and Roland Pond and Tar River.

The Occaneechi was the first known inhabitants of what is now Vance County. In the 1700s, immigrants of English, German, and Scotch-Irish heritage moved in the region. However, the first European to explore the region was John Lederer in 1670. Lederer and his Indian guide traveled through Vance and the area, and he recorded his travels in a daily journal. Originally discounted as a fraudulent explorer, Lederer's recordings remained in obscurity for over 200 years.

In 1826, the first armed forces academy in North Carolina was built in Williamsborough in Vance County. The Bingham School, founded by Captain D. H. Bingham, was started due to a national demand for more efficient army leaders. Courses in English, Latin, geometry, military navigation, and tactical warfare were taught at school. However, the school moved to Littleton and then to Wilmington. There, for a short time, it served as a training school for military officers.

David and John Cooper founded the Henderson and Harriet Mills in 1895, and for a short time the cotton mills prospered. However, mill workers started to demand higher wages and better work environment, and the mills were eventually shutdown and a strike started in 1958. A year later, disgruntled workers ransacked the Henderson mill headquarters, attacked several replacement workers, and even used dynamite to blow a strikebreaker's house at Harriet Mills. Governor Luther Hodges had to step in. He sent National Guard troops to Vance County to handle the strike riots. Eight rioters were arrested and convicted on conspiracy charges, and the strike was called to end in 1961. A month later the Henderson and Harriet Mills were reopened and started to operate at full capacity.

In 1871, the Glass House was opened outside the community of Vance Kittrell, and it some historians believe the Glass House to be the first winter resort in the state of North Carolina. Originally a hotel that was built in 1856, Washington F. Davis bought and renovated the property, and it was called the Glass House because all of the house porches were adorned with potted plants and glassed in to give it a distinct outside look. Northern hunters were the first to visit the hotel, but after news of the fresh air and the Glass House's invigorating environment spread in the north, every year tuberculosis patients visited the resort in the winter months. Although the resort burnt down in 1893, the Glass House existed for nearly three decades during the era of North Carolina's popular hotels, hot springs attraction, and health resorts.

Several local landmarks exist in Vance County. Historic structures include the county courthouse (1884) and St. John's Episcopal Church (1773). St. John's is one of the three remaining colonial church buildings in North Carolina. Kerr Lake (1950s) was constructed to help stifle the frequent flooding that occurred in eastern North Carolina. Today, the Kerr Lake State Recreation Area operates the largest man-made lake on the eastern side of the United States, and boaters, fishermen, and other water spot enthusiasts visit Kerr Lake every year. In addition, Vance County was home to the original Rose's Department Store, opened by Paul and T. B. Rose in Henderson in 1915.

Vance County hosts annual events and festivals and important cultural institutions operate in the region. The Kerr Lake Art Society and the Vance County Historical Museum are visited by frequent art viewers and history patrons. The Kerr Lake Art Show, the Memorial Day Weekend Concert in the Park, and the Vance County Regional Fair are year-round events held in Vance County each year.






Our Experience


We were confused here. The new modern courthouse was well marked. However we could find no signs on another building that looked like a historic courthouse. We took photos of the building and later did some research to determine the building was in fact the historic courthouse. It was in a cramped location with a road near the front.

In the last two photos below, look at the reflection in the window. Laurie got a nice reflection of the confederate soldier in the upper window.

While trying to find info on the historic courthouse I ran across the following from Wikipedia. I'm sure this kind of thing happened many times.

The county was formed by the white Democratic-dominated legislature in 1881 following the Reconstruction era from parts of Franklin, Granville, and Warren counties. The county is named after Zebulon Baird Vance, a Governor of North Carolina (1862-1865, 1877-1879) and United States senator (1879-1894).

According to the 1955 book, Zeb's Black Baby, by Samuel Thomas Peace, Sr., this was a political decision to concentrate blacks and Republicans in one county and keep Democratic majorities in the other counties, an example of gerrymandering:

The formation of Vance County was accomplished largely as a political expediency. It was in 1881 when Blacks in large numbers were voting solidly Republican. Granville and Franklin Counties were nip and tuck, Democratic or Republican. From the Democratic standpoint, Warren County was hopelessly Republican. But by taking from Granville, Franklin and Warren, those sections that were heavily Republican and out of these sections forming the new county of Vance, the Democratic party could lose Vance to the Republicans and save Granville and Franklin for the Democrats. [U.S.] Senator Vance was a Democrat. He took kindly to this move and thanked the [North Carolina] Legislature for honoring him with naming the new county after him. At the same time...Vance showed his humor by always referring to Vance County as 'Zeb's Black Baby.'

In the 1890 Census, Vance County was more than 63 percent African American. In 1894 a biracial coalition of Populists and Republicans elected African American George M. White to the US Congress and gained control of the state house. The Democrats were determined to forestall this happening again. White strongly opposed the new constitution, saying "I cannot live in North Carolina and be a man and be treated as a man."[4] He left the state after his second term expired, setting up a business in Washington, DC

The Democrats in the North Carolina legislature settled the political competition with the Republicans by following other southern states and passing a law in 1896 making voting more difficult, and a new constitution in 1899 that disfranchised most blacks by poll taxes, literacy tests and grandfather clauses. Contemporary accounts estimated that 75,000 black male citizens of the state lost the vote. In 1900 blacks numbered 630,207 citizens, about 33% of the state's total population. This situation held until past the mid-20th century and after passage of the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965.



Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:48:22 AM EDT Altitude: 526 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Laurie
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:50:52 AM EDT Altitude: 535 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:54:32 AM EDT Altitude: 535 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:55:14 AM EDT Altitude: 535 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:55:36 AM EDT Altitude: 532 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:46:42 AM EDT Altitude: 516 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Warren County Courthouse in Warrenton, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:46:59 AM EDT Altitude: 518 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Warren County Courthouse in Warrenton, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:54:11 AM EDT Altitude: 533 ft Camera: iPhone 5sDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina
Oct 30, 2015 Fri 11:54:15 AM EDT Altitude: 535 ft Camera: iPhone 5sDisplay on Google Map
Vance County Courthouse in Henderson, North Carolina



Google Map Track Log


Pick a trip from the first drop down list below.
Moore County Courthouse in Carthage, North Carolina




TagsConfederate Statues  (32),Motorcycle  (97),National Parks  (9),Odd  (1),Route 66  (33),Unemployment  (6),Zombies  (1)