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Ozaukee County was formed from Washington County in 1853 with Port
Washington being chosen as the new county seat. Shortly thereafter, a
two-story courthouse with a raised basement level was built in Port
Washington on the southwest corner of Main Street and Wisconsin Street.
This first courthouse was completed in 1854.
On November 11, 1862, the courthouse became the scene of the
famous Port Washington Civil War
Draft
Riot. Attorney William Pors, the draft commissioner, was
attacked by protesters of the draft and was thrown down the
courthouse steps. He escaped with his life to Milwaukee. Governor
Salomon immediately sent troops to Port Washington and the riot
was quelled the next day.
By the mid-1890s, the original courthouse had deteriorated and it was
becoming too small for the needs of growing Ozaukee County. On November
24, 1899, the Ozaukee County Board passed a resolution stating that the
courthouse was unsafe for conducting court and that bonds should be issued
for the building of a new courthouse.
While the intent of the County Board was to build the new
courthouse in 1900, a controversy over the location of the county
seat postponed the issuing of bonds. On February 12, 1900, the
County Board received a petition signed by 1364 residents of
Ozaukee County demanding that the county seat be moved to
Cedarburg and that the new courthouse be built there. From this
petition a bitter fight broke out between residents of Port
Washington and Cedarburg each vying for the new courthouse.
After months of controversy, the County Board voted to retain Port
Washington as the county seat. It was also decided that the old courthouse
would be torn down and that the new courthouse would be built on the same
site. In late 1900 the old courthouse began to be dismantled. Court for
Ozaukee County was held in the “Opera House” located on the corner of
Wisconsin Street and Grand Avenue, now the site of the Port Washington
Municipal Building.
Bonds to fund the construction of the courthouse were issued for
$45,000. The well-known Milwaukee architect Fred Graf was hired and the
construction firm of Wurthmann and Vollmar of Cedarburg was contracted.
In June of 1901 plans were underway for the laying of the
cornerstone of the new courthouse. The Merchants Advancement
Association of Port Washington stepped forward to plan and finance
the cornerstone celebration. On Saturday June 29, 1901, Port
Washington welcomed visitors and dignitaries from the county and
beyond. The cornerstone festivities began with a grand parade
through the streets of downtown Port Washington. Numerous local
societies and organizations participated in the parade. The
Cedarburg Band and Zimmermann’s Band of Port Washington provided
music.
The parade was followed by the cornerstone ceremony held on the
courthouse grounds. Speeches were given by Mayor Rose of
Milwaukee, Honorable Mr. Fink of Milwaukee, and Fred Dennett,
owner of the Wisconsin Chair Company of Port Washington and mayor
of Sheboygan. A special poem for the cornerstone laying was
written and recited by N. E. Becker, the well-known Luxembourger
poet of the Town of Fredonia. Becker was then serving as state
assemblyman and was chairman of the Town of Fredonia when the new
courthouse was proposed in 1899. Becker read the poem in the
Letzebuergesch dialect.
Port Washington’s mayor, Mr. Biedermann, presided over the
cornerstone ceremony. As part of the ceremony, county officials declared
the stone to be square, plumb, and horizontal. The cornerstone was then
declared as “placed” and a gun volley from the German Landwehr Verein
completed the ceremony.
The cornerstone was purchased from the famous Bedford Stone Quarry in
Indiana. The stone weighs three tons and is 4 ½ feet long, 3 feet high,
and 2 ½ feet wide. The names of the members of the County Board and the
name of the architect, Mr. Graf, were inscribed on the cornerstone. The
inscriptions were chiseled by Mr. Walter Tingley of Milwaukee.
A large hole measuring 16 inches long by 11 inches wide by 12 inches
deep was cut into the cornerstone. This hole became the receptacle for a
tin box filled with historic items, in today’s nomenclature – a time
capsule.
Following the laying of the cornerstone, work continued on the
courthouse throughout 1901. The beautiful, Romanesque building was
completed on March 29, 1902. The total cost of the edifice including
furnishing was $55,637. Various county offices found a new home in the
spacious, state-of-the-art courthouse. Circuit court was held in the large
courtroom on the second floor. This room now serves as the County Board
meeting room.
By the late 1950s, it was obvious that the county had outgrown
the 1901 courthouse. The 1960 county budget included a new
building fund. Planning for the new courthouse annex continued
through the 1960s. Bids for the annex were opened on August 30,
1967 and the total of the low bids was $1,717,814. This did not
include furniture and equipment costing approximately $140,000 and
architect’s fees of $118,000. Plans were also made to remodel
the 1901 courthouse and the existing jail building. Bonds were
issued for $2,200,000. The courthouse annex was completed in 1969
with occupancy occurring on April 7, 1969.
On December 12, 1976, the 1901 Ozaukee County Courthouse was placed on
the National Register of Historic Places through the US Department of the
Interior. Local Port Washington historians, Anna and Viola Ubbink, can be
credited with promoting the National Register status of the courthouse.
The 1901 courthouse quietly remained an everyday fixture in Ozaukee
County and Port Washington until early 2001. In anticipation of the
100th
anniversary of the laying of the cornerstone, plans were set into
motion to celebrate the legacy of this majestic, old building. Its years
of faithful service and its stalwart beauty needed to be re-appreciated.
As a part of this anniversary year’s celebration, the
cornerstone was opened on May 9, 2001. County Highway Department
workers toiled for hours to open the stone and eventually they
found the time capsule hidden within. The next day, May 10th, the
time capsule was opened and its contents saw the light of day for
the first time in 100 years. The tin box, lined with copper,
contained 117 items placed in it by county officials and residents
100 years ago.
The time capsule contained newspapers, paper documents from
organizations and churches, business cards, 1901 stamps and coins,
a small metal plaque memorializing the contractors Wurthmann and
Vollmar, commemorative ribbons from the cornerstone celebration,
four historic photographs, an original copy of Becker’s poem,
speeches from the ceremony, and the script for the laying of the
cornerstone ceremony. All these items appropriately reflect the
people and the culture of Ozaukee County 1901.
While these items will be placed back into the cornerstone after today’s
celebration, it is only fitting
that our current generation also leave behind some mementos of our modern
day experience as citizens of Ozaukee County. Another time capsule,
reflecting this 100th anniversary celebration, will be placed near the
cornerstone with the first time capsule. It will be our historic legacy to
the generations yet to come.
May the courthouse building we celebrate today and its tradition of
service to the citizens of Ozaukee County be alive and well in the year
2101. |