The Courthouse Square in Texas
Robert E Veselka author Kenneth E Foote editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
How the layout of courthouse squares reflect the different town-planning traditions that settlers brought to Texas from Europe, Mexico, and the United States.
With its dignified courthouse set among shade trees and lawns dotted with monuments to prominent citizens and fallen veterans, the courthouse square remains the civic center in a majority of the county seats of Texas. Yet the squares themselves vary in form and layout, reflecting the different town-planning traditions that settlers brought from Europe, Mexico, and the United States. In fact, one way to trace settlement patterns and ethnic dispersion in Texas is by mapping the different types of courthouse squares.
This book offers the first complete inventory of Texas courthouse squares, drawn from extensive archival research and site visits to 139 of the 254 county seats. Robert Veselka classifies every existing plan by type and origin, including patterns and variants not previously identified. He also explores the social and symbolic functions of these plans as he discusses the historical and modern uses of the squares. He draws interesting new conclusions about why the courthouse square remains the hub of commercial and civic activity in the smaller county seats, when it has lost its prominence in others.
"This book breaks new ground in the interpretation of Texas townscapes... It could serve as a 'field guide' to Texas courthouse squares." oRichard V. Francaviglia, author of Main Street Revisited: Time, Space, and Image Building in Small Town America
ISBN: 9780292787360
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
260 pages