Cherokee County Courthouse (Murphy, North Carolina)
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Cherokee County Courthouse (Murphy, North Carolina)
The Cherokee County Courthouse is a historic courthouse in Murphy, North Carolina, Murphy, North Carolina, United States, the county seat of Cherokee County, North Carolina, Cherokee County, that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). Description The courthouse is located at the corner of Central and Peachtree Streets. The Classical Revival building, built in 1926 to a design by James J. Baldwin, was the second built on the site. The prior courthouse on the site burned twice, but after the second fire was not salvageable. The blue marble-faced two story building has a five-bay diagonal section facing the roadway that forms its entrance. It has a four-columned Corinthian Greek portico and is topped by a monumental cupola which rises above the structure. Retrieved January 25, 2024. The floors are marble. The courthouse is one of only a few in the United States built from marble quarried in its own county. The building’s interior, especially its courtroom, ...
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Murphy, North Carolina
Murphy is a town in and the county seat of Cherokee County, North Carolina, United States. It is situated at the confluence of the Hiwassee River, Hiwassee and Valley River, Valley rivers. It is the westernmost county seat in the state of North Carolina, approximately from the state capital in Raleigh, North Carolina, Raleigh. The population of Murphy was 1,627 at the 2010 census. Etymology and history This area had long been part of the homelands of the Cherokee people. They knew this site along the Hiwassee River as ''Tlanusi-yi'' (the Leech Place). They had a legend about a giant leech named ''Tlanusi'', that lived in the river here. The Trading Path (later called the "Unicoi Turnpike") passed by the future site of Murphy, connecting the Cherokee lands east of the mountains with what were known to European colonists as the "Overhill Cherokee, Overhill Towns" of Tennessee. After European Americans began to settle here, they named the site "Hunnington/ Huntington" after A.R.S. ...
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