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Cahokia
Courthouse
107 Elm Street
Cahokia, Illinois
618-332-1782
Visiting Hours
9 am to 5 pm, Wednesday - Sunday
Closed: Thanksgiving and Christmas
Free - Donations suggested
Built
about 1740 as a four-room private residence by Jean le Poincet and later
purchased by Francois Saucier, son
of the designer of Fort de Chartres,
the Cahokia Courthouse is an example
of the French Creole poteaux-sur-solle (post-on-sill) construction
method which French
settlers brought over their native Normandy in northern France. In this
method upright hewn logs are seated on a horizontal log sill and the
spaces between the logs are filled with stone and mortar chinking. This
type of construction is different from the more familiar horizontal
Anglo-American style and is quite rare with only about thirty buildings of
this type left in North America.
When the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783
ending the American Revolution, the Illinois Country came under control of
the United States. In 1784 the Northwest Territory was created by the
Continental Congress and in a ceremony in 1790 in Cahokia the new governor
of the territory, Arthur St. Clair, laid out the county that bears his
name and established the county seat at Cahokia. In that same year the judges of St.
Clair County began using the Saucier residence for use as an administrative
center and courthouse, formally purchasing the building in 1793. The
largest room was used as the courtroom (photo right,) with the other rooms
being used as a judge's chamber, a
multipurpose room which included the post office, and a meeting room for
attorneys which also doubled as schoolroom when court wasn't in session. Originally St. Clair County was an
immense territory almost as large as the state of Illinois, but as the
years went by portions of the county were split off to form separate
counties. For twenty-four years the Cahokia Courthouse served as a U.S.
territorial courthouse and an important center of political activity in
the Old Northwest. By 1814, with St. Clair County's jurisdiction
decreasing to its present size, demands for a centrally located county
seat, and floods constantly threatening Cahokia, the county seat was
moved to the newly created town of Belleville.
The
Lewis and Clark Connection
“I came to at 3 oClock at the Kohokia
Landing, which is at the mouth of Kohokia Creek ¾ of a mile from the
town, and in view of St. Louis which is about 2½ miles distant.”
With this entry William Clark signaled a six-month relationship with the
village of Cahokia. As Cahokia was the local seat of American
government in the region and contained the westernmost post office of the
United States, the Cahokia Courthouse was used often by the
Expedition to send official communications as well as
personal correspondence as noted by Clark in this December 13, 1803 entry:
“…Sent off C Floyd to Koho [Cahokia] with Letters for Capt Lewis to
put in the post office…”
Visit our special Lewis
and Clark Section to learn more about the Corps of Discovery’s
experience during their stay in the Middle Mississippi River Valley. greatriverroad.com’s
special coverage includes information on all of the region’s sites and
events as well as supplemental articles relating to the expedition’s
experience during the winter of 1803-04. |
By 1901 the former courthouse had deteriorated so
badly due to floods and neglect that it was used only to store farm
machinery and had been bought by an East St. Louis businessman who had it
dismantled and reassembled for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in
St. Louis as a classic example of early French Creole architecture. The structure at the Exposition was only about half the size of
the original with leftover timbers reportedly made into wooden cigars and
sold as souvenirs at the Fair. After the Exposition the Chicago Historical
Society purchased the courthouse and a small structure was constructed
from the materials on Wooded Island in Jackson Park. The building stood
there until 1939 when it was returned to Cahokia.
Reconstruction of the courthouse in its current
form began as a WPA
project. Archaeological investigations of the original site began in 1938
and uncovered the original foundations, fireplace footings, fragments of porch
columns, domestic objects and fragments of ironwork. In 1939, following a study of photographs, sketches of the building, and
of French Creole construction methods,
the courthouse was dismantled and shipped to Cahokia with great care. All of
the logs returned from Chicago were incorporated in the reconstruction.
The courthouse was dedicated May 20, 1940 as a reminder of the
"splendid heritage" of the citizens of Illinois.
The
courthouse now rests on its original foundation of stone nearly two feet
thick. Walnut beams extend the cantilevered roof over the porch. Inside,
the courtroom has been refurbished to the way it would have been in
the early 19th century and the other three rooms contain exhibits that illustrate French colonial life,
the history of the courthouse, and Lewis and Clark’s experience in
Cahokia (photo right,) during the winter of 1803-04 and the role of post
offices in colonial America. The Cahokia Courthouse
is the centerpiece of the Colonial Cahokia State Historic Sites complex
that also includes the Jarrot Mansion, the Martin-Boismenue
House, and a
Visitors Center. Information can be obtained at the Visitors Center about
the Holy Family Log Church and other area attractions.
www.state.il.us/HPA/hs/Courthouse.htm - Official site of the Cahokia
Courthouse provided by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
Directions: FROM IL-3 South into Cahokia (Mississippi Avenue – will
change into Water Street,) take a right onto West First Street, go two
blocks to Elm Street. FROM IL-3 North into Cahokia (Water Street,) take a take a left
onto West First Street, go two blocks to Elm Street. FROM IL-157 into Cahokia (St.
Nicholas Drive) to IL-3 (Water Street) take a left, go one block to West
First Street, take a right, go two blocks to Elm Street.
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