Newton County Courts
Online Tour of Newton County Courthouse
On this page you will find information about the Newton County Courthouse, including its location, hours, available parking, accessible entrances, and a short history of the courthouse building. In addition, you can access a 360° virtual tour that allows you to view interactive images of the interior rooms and exterior views of the courthouse, as well as still photographs of the courthouse and its historical details.
 

Courthouse Location
201 N. 3rd Street
Kentland, IN 47951 [map]
[contact information]


Courthouse Hours
Monday through Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.


Accessibility for Persons with Disabilities
The courthouse has an accessible entrance on the west side of the building. Elevators are available inside.


Parking
Free curbside parking is available on the West side of the Courthouse near the public entrance.


Pertinent Facts About Newton County

  • Newton County is the youngest county in the state (1860).
  • Its first courthouse in 1861 was a plain two-story which cost $1000. The current courthouse was built in 1906 at a cost of $35,000. The courtrooms were remodeled in 1989.
  • The State of Indiana owns 10,812 acres in Newton County.
  • The population of Newton county is 13,496.
  • There are ten townships and five incorporated towns.
  • Newton county is 33¼ miles long and 13¼ miles wide.
  • Newton county has 669.3 miles of county roads.
  • Newton county is 413 square miles.
  • Jasper county and Newton county were named after two Sergeants who served in the Revolutionary War.


Newton County Courthouse History
It’s not unusual for locals to try to move the seat of a county courthouse. After all the county seat brings recognition, commerce, and hopefully prosperity. But after nine attempts to remove the county seat from Kentland, the Indiana Supreme Court put an end to the squabble. After 40 years of controversy, the State Supreme Court ruled in 1904 that the courthouse would remain in Kentland.

While the courthouse stayed in Kentland, the State Supreme Court noted in its decision

The original court house built in 1860, and which is still in use, and contains all the court and public records of the county, is a plain, cheap, wooden structure, so advanced in decay and dilapidation that the entire edifice is said to shake when the court bell is rung over it.

Kentland, Newton County Centennial, 1860-1860 (Kentland, IN: Newton County Centennial Committee, 1960), p. 15.

On April 3, 1905 Newton County commissioners voted to replace the original 1860 courthouse.

Architect Joseph T. Hutton of Hammond designed the new building. Its understated simplicity reflects the Neoclassical style. Limestone trim subtly accents the buff brick walls while the pediment recalls the ancient temples of Greece.

During the construction of the building in 1906, the county cleared the surrounding land of additional buildings, to create a Shelbyville Square for the courthouse.


Learn more about architectural styles found in many of Indiana's courthouses from the following publication by the Historic Landmarks Foundation: On the Street Where You Live: Be a Building Watcher!
[Requires Acrobat Reader to view and print]

Learn more about courthouse squares at the Courts in the Classroom website, provided by the Historic Landmarks Foundation.

 
Last modified on Monday, December, 31, 2007
Courthouse Photographs
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Postcard of the Newton County Courthouse and Old Log Jail
Postcard of the Newton County Courthouse
 
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