Noble County Courthouse (Oklahoma)
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Noble County Courthouse (Oklahoma)
The Noble County Courthouse is a three-story building, built in 1915, located at the center of the Perry, Oklahoma, Perry Perry Courthouse Square Historic District, Courthouse Square Historic District. The size of the plot on which it stands is . The architect was Hawk and Parr, J.W. Hawk. "Noble County Courthouse - Perry, OK". Waymarking.com August 18, 2010.
Accessed November 22, 2016.
There have been minimal alterations either inside or outside the building, and it still serves its original purpose as the center of county government and repository of all county records.


Description

The Noble County Courthouse is constructed of stone and brick, and has a square footprint. The exterior is painted white. Accord ...
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Perry, Oklahoma
Perry is a city in, and county seat of, Noble County, Oklahoma, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 5,126, a 2.0 percent decrease from the figure of 5,230 in 2000. The city is home of Ditch Witch construction equipment. History 19th century The Treaty of New Echota, May 23, 1836, assigned the Cherokee Outlet to the Cherokees as a perpetual outlet to use for passage to travel and hunt in the West from their reservation in the eastern part of what became Oklahoma. This was in addition to the land given to the Cherokees for settlement after their arrival from their home in Georgia. Perry's original name was Wharton, the name of a train station built in 1886 by the Southern Kansas Railway (part of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway system) about 1 mile south of the present city and it was located within the Outlet. Before the 1893 Cherokee Outlet Opening, the U.S. government selected a site a mile north of Wharton for a land office. A town around th ...
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