Liverpool Court House - Liverpool, Nova Scotia
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 44° 02.298 W 064° 42.746
20T E 362794 N 4877552
This classically styled Greek Revival courthouse had been in continuous use as a courthouse for 161 years, as of 2015.
Waymark Code: WMP74H
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 07/12/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 2

To the southeast of downtown Liverpool, the Queens County Courthouse was built in a predominantly residential neighborhood, on Church Street at Court Street. The Greek Revival façade is a sure indication of the mature of the building - no sign is needed in order that people find the courthouse. In fact, the only signage of any sort on the façade is the bronze Provincial Heritage Property plaque.

In June of 2015 the province's lease on the building expired and was not renewed. The province had leased the building for court sessions about four times per month but budget cuts have forced consolidation of its satellite courthouses, with several courthouses no longer being used for provincial court sessions. At present the building's future is not clear, but the town will no doubt create an alternative use for it. Read a news story on the courthouse's closure.

In 1984 the courthouse was the scene of a precedent setting trial which led to the publication of the widely read book "Life With Billy" and the movie of the same name.
Liverpool Court House
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Liverpool Court House is a landmark Greek Revival temple style building, located in the centre of Liverpool, NS. The building and the lot are included in the provincial designation.

HERITAGE VALUE
The Liverpool Court House is valued as an excellent example of Greek Revival temple-style architecture and for its continuous use as a court house since its construction in 1854.

In 1853 Chief Justice Brenton Halliburton publicly reprimanded Liverpool Township for the deplorable conditions of their ca. 1790 court house. At the time Liverpool was the seat of government for Queens County and hosted the Supreme Court and the Court of General Sessions of the Peace. In response, representatives from the County of Queens gathered early in 1854 to plan the building of a new court house. The group requested a good, plain and substantial court house. Local carpenter William C. Hammond designed by the building and it was built by LaHave native George W. Boehner. These men created one of the finest examples of Greek Revival temple-style buildings in Canada; an indication that the American Greek Revival Movement of the early nineteenth century had spread north from New England. Court house designs influenced by this movement were often called Temples of Justice, reflecting the fashionable interest in ancient Greece, the birthplace of democracy.

The Liverpool Court House may be the only surviving example of the Temple of Justice ideal in the rural Maritimes. The building is wooden, however the façades have been covered with stucco and scored to resemble cut stones; a technique that is very rare in Nova Scotia.

The first court sitting in the new Liverpool Court House took place in October 1854, with Judge William F. DesBarres presiding. Judge DesBarres was the grandson of J.W.F. DesBarres, former provincial surveyor and Lieutenant Governor of Cape Breton and Prince Edward Island. Since that time the building as been in continuous use as a court house. The famed anti-confederate Joseph Howe gave a speech from the steps of the building during the 1867 election debates. In 1984 it was the location of the trial and acquittal of Jane Stafford for the killing of her husband. The case set the precedent for citing spousal abuse as a defense and was the subject of the widely read “Life With Billy” and subsequent movie.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
Character-defining elements of the Liverpool Court House relate to its Greek Revival style and include:
- one storey;
- twelve-over-twelve sash windows, one on front façade and three on each side;
- pilasters at all four corners;
- rear porch with dropped pediment supported by two Doric columns;
- wood construction;
- wood exterior covered in stucco scored to resemble cut stone;
- granite block footers;
- massive triglyph frieze;
- prominent pediment and prostyle front portico with four fluted Doric columns.
From Historic Places Canada
Year Built: 1854

Current Use of Building: Vacant at present - this will no doubt change

Level of Courts: State/Provincial

Architect: William C. Hammond - (a local carpenter)

Dates this building was used to house judicial proceedings: 1854-2015

Physical Address:
137 Church Street
Liverpool, Nova Scotia
B0T 1K0


Hours:
Closed at present


Related Website: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
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Lynx Humble visited Liverpool Court House - Liverpool, Nova Scotia 09/22/2018 Lynx Humble visited it