PERRY COUNTY
TOURISM
Prepared by Pawpaw for Perry County Tourism Committee
PERRY COUNTY
COURTHOUSE
121 East Main Street
Linden
931 589-2219
Open weekdays, 8 AM-4 PM
VISITOR NOTE: Visitors are welcome but
must pass through security screening. No
weapons are allowed, and cell phones and
cameras are not permitted while court is in
session.
Fourth county seat, fourth courthouse
Linden is actually the fourth seat of government for Perry County. When the county
was organized in 1819, it included what is now Decatur County on the western side of
the Tennessee. The first court met at the home of James Dixon on Lick Creek, then
chose a site on the river for the county seat and named it “Perryville.” After the lands
west of the river were ceded to Decatur County in 1846, the small settlement of
Harrisburg, a few miles south of Linden, was made the new county seat. Two years
later, county residents voted to move the county government to Linden.
The first courthouse in Linden was a temporary log structure; it was soon replaced by a
two-story frame courthouse completed in 1850. During the Civil War, on May 12, 1863,
Linden was attacked by Union forces in an amphibious assault from the Tennessee River
and the courthouse and all the county records were burned. No replacement was built
until after the war when in 1868 county officials spent $9500 to construct a new brick
courthouse.
By the late 1920s, the 1868 brick courthouse was too small to meet local needs, so in
1927 the Perry County Court voted to renovate and expand the structure. However,
while work was underway the following year, it too burned. The Court then determined
to construct a much larger structure to meet the governmental needs; they wanted it
to be stylish as well in order to showcase that Perry was a progressive county. They
engaged Nashville architect Clarence Kelley Colley to design the structure; Bell Brothers
& Company of Nashville was the contractor. The edifice is a good example of the
twentieth century Colonial Revival style incorporating recessed columns and pilasters
and Palladian pediments over the north and south entries. The striking courthouse
continues to serve as the seat of government and was listed in the National Register of
Historic Places in 1995.
1868 courthouse which preceded the current structure
Perry County’s fourth courthouse
in Linden is an emphatic
example of Colonial Revival
architecture reflecting the
county’s progressive character.
The Perry County
Courthouse is a
designated site on
the Tennessee Civil
War Trails system.