Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina

Oct 31, 2015 Sat0Confederate Statues

Laurie and I like riding our Gold Wing motorcycle. But it is easy to get into a rut and just ride the same roads. So to force ourselves to ride to places we would not normally visit we made a goal to visit and photograph all 100 North Carolina courthouses within 1 year.

As usual, we got a little behind. We started in July 2015 and finished 99 out of 100 by June 2018. The last courthouse was in our home county of Wake and it took us until Feb 2021 to get that final one. But we made it! This blog is about one of those visits.

Many NC courthouses were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The nomination form has some interesting facts about the various courthouse styles over the years.






Courthouse Information


Wikipedia says the following about the courthouse:

The Randolph County Courthouse is a historic courthouse located at Asheboro, Randolph County, North Carolina. It was designed by Wheeler, Runge & Dickey and built in 1908-1909. It is a three-story, Classical Revival style yellow brick building with a hipped roof. It features a powerful Second Empire dome clad in ribbed tile and front portico. The listing included three contributing buildings on 3.1 acres (1.3 ha). The two other contributing buildings are an early-20th century jail and late Victorian brick building containing law offices.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.






County Information


The North Carolina History Project lists the following information for this county:

Annexed from Guilford, Randolph County was formed in 1779, and named for Peyton Randolph, a Virginian who once presided over the Continental Congress. Abraham Reese received a commission from the North Carolina legislature to hold court until the justices of the peace constructed a courthouse in the new county. The construction was delayed, so in 1783 the state legislature terminated some of the commissioners for failing to establish a county seat. By 1788 a new courthouse and town formed around the property of Thomas Douggan; Johnstonville, in respect of Samuel Johnston, was the name given to the town. Asheboro, named after Governor Samuel Ashe, became the county seat in 1796, and other townships within Randolph County include Ramseur, Seagrove, Archdale, Franklinville, Whynot, Worthville, Coleridge, and Trinity.

Randolph has had a deep history steeped in the religious fervor of the early Quakers and Baptists. During the 1740s, The Pennsylvania Quakers were the first religious group to inhabit the region. These Quakers, including the Coffin family, strongly opposed slavery, and some helped create the Underground Railroad. At the onset of the Civil War, Quakers and other pacifists fled to the covered hills of Randolph.

In 1755 Shubal Stearns, a Boston, Baptist minister, settled in present-day Randolph County, and the religious sentiment gradually altered to the new Baptist doctrines. Stearns formed the first Separate church, Sandy Creek Church, in the North Carolina colony, and it soon became the "Mother of all Separate Baptists" because of the great number of missionaries and evangelists it sent out across the state (Ready, p. 63). The Sandy Creek Church, just northeast of present-day Asheboro, took a more evangelistic approach to the Baptist tradition, and the view spread quickly. Baptists became the largest denomination in the new colony by the American Revolution.

Trinity College, the precursor to Duke University, was established in Randolph in 1838-39; Methodists wanted a school to cultivate young ministers to later sow Christian doctrine. Originally in a small log cabin, Trinity was then called Union Institute. In 1851, its name changed to Normal College and its scope shifted to equipping teachers with skills for common schools. After a period of financial difficulty, the Methodist Conference took control of the institution and changed its name to Trinity College. By the 1870s the college had almost two hundred students, but the school was later relocated in Durham and became known as Duke University in 1892.

Beginning in the mid-to-late-nineteenth century, an industrial surge fostered economic growth in Randolph County. According to historian Milton Ready, several cotton mills were constructed in Randolph and its adjacent counties, and many "are still operated by descendants of those who established them in the 1830s" (pg. 408). By 1860, Randolph County had five cotton mills, and most used the Deep River as a power source. Governor Jonathan Worth (1802-1869) owned and chartered the Cedar Falls Mill in 1836. The mill was a big part of the Confederate war effort, supplying clothes to Confederate soldiers. A section of the mill still stands today.

Randolph County is home to several remarkable natural and cultural attractions and historic sites. The Uwharrie National Forest covers a southwestern section of the county while Purgatory Mountain, Squirrel Creek, and the Little River make up a part of the countryside as well. The Sunset Theatre in Asheboro (1929), Skeen's Mill Covered Bridge (1890s), and the Asheboro City Cemetery (1827) are several historic landmarks within the region. Seagrove, the center for North Carolina property production, is the site of the Museum of North Carolina Traditional Pottery. The American Classic Motorcycle Museum and the Richard Petty Museum, which honors the all-time victory leader of NASCAR, are both situated within Randolph County. Lastly, the North Carolina State Zoological Park, the largest natural habitat zoo in the United States, is a 500-acre exhibit that houses over 1,000 animals in Asheboro.






Our Experience


I have driven through Asheboro many times but never through downtown. By pass roads around small towns helps traffic flow but we miss out on a lot of local history. The Confederate statue was facing east in the morning sun. I don't know if that was intentional, but it made for a great photo.

Laurie struck up a conversation with Johnny on a ladder and he said to be sure to check out the large mural. It depicts an earlier time when the road was paved with wooden planks. The detail in the mural is pretty amazing. Click on some of the photos and check them out.

The large tree near the monuments was getting a trim so I could only get a distant photo. But the memorial looked pretty extensive.

Oct 31, 2015 Sat 10:54:24 AM EDT Altitude: 844 ft Camera: iPhone 5sDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
Oct 31, 2015 Sat 10:53:43 AM EDT Altitude: 844 ft Camera: iPhone 5sDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
Oct 31, 2015 Sat 10:54:55 AM EDT Altitude: 844 ft Camera: iPhone 5sDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
Oct 31, 2015 Sat 10:55:29 AM EDT Altitude: 844 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
Oct 31, 2015 Sat 10:59:29 AM EDT Altitude: 846 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
Oct 31, 2015 Sat 11:04:57 AM EDT Altitude: 846 ft Camera: X100SDisplay on Google Map
Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina
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Randolph County Courthouse in Asheboro, North Carolina



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