Alamance County Courthouse, Neoclassical courthouse in Graham, United States.
The Alamance County Courthouse is a neoclassical structure at Court Square featuring symmetrical design, solid stone columns, and a central dome that crowns the main entrance. The building displays clean architectural lines and balanced proportions typical of early 1920s courthouse design.
Built in 1923 by architect Harry Barton, this structure replaced the original 1852 courthouse that had become inadequate for the expanding county. The new building represented a major upgrade in local government infrastructure at that time.
The courthouse serves as a gathering point for local civic activities and holds records that connect residents to their family past. Visitors come here to trace ancestry through documents spanning generations.
The building sits directly on Court Square in downtown Graham and is easy to reach on foot from nearby areas. Free parking is available within a short walk of the courthouse.
The original courthouse bell from the 1852 building, which disappeared for generations, was recovered in the 1990s after decades of being lost. It now stands on display in Sesquicentennial Park next to the building as a tangible connection to the past.
The community of curious travelers
AroundUs brings together thousands of curated places, local tips, and hidden gems, enriched daily by 60,000 contributors worldwide.