Once a Lost Cause, Dallas County Courthouse Has Been Restored as a Museum
By Margaret Foster | From Preservation | Aug. 8, 2007
A Dallas courthouse, rescued from demolition twice and vacant since the 1980s, has been restored as a museum.
Last week, workers completed the restoration of the 1892 Dallas County Courthouse, known as Old Red. A replica of the original 90-foot-tall clock tower, removed in 1919 because winds threatened to bring it down, tops the four-story Romanesque building.
A log cabin built on the site in 1856 served as Dallas County's first courthouse for two years until it burned down. A second courthouse burned in 1890, but the third survived. In both 1938 and 1946, the city voted to demolish Old Red for new skyscrapers but had second thoughts. A citizens group formed in the late 1980s to stabilize the former courthouse.
During the six-year project, workers also restored the building's cast-iron grand staircase, which had been removed in the 1920s.
The building opened in May as the Old Red Museum of Dallas County History & Culture. Together, the state and county chipped in $35.6 million, and private donors contributed another $14.5 million.
Like what you see? Subscribe to Preservation and explore the mystery and meaning of our most beloved places through in-depth features and vibrant photography.
Comments


