Third County Courthouse (Staten Island)

Coordinates: 40°34′15″N 74°8′44″W / 40.57083°N 74.14556°W / 40.57083; -74.14556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Third County Courthouse

The Third County Courthouse is an 1837 Greek Revival building at 302 Center Street in Historic Richmond Town, near the geographic center of Staten Island, New York. Preceded by two smaller courthouses, it was the Richmond County Courthouse during most of the nineteenth century and was in use until 1919,[1] when it was replaced by the Richmond County Courthouse in St. George.

The building is the oldest extant structure in New York City built primarily as a courthouse. A jail used to be adjacent. The building was the site of the sensational 1844 trial of Polly Bodine, who was accused of murdering her husband's sister and niece and setting fire to their house, a case commented on by Edgar Allan Poe and P. T. Barnum, among others. The packed trial resulted in a hung jury and then an early case of change of venue, first to Manhattan, which resulted in a conviction, later overturned, and then to Newburgh, New York, where Bodine was acquitted.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Village Map". Historic Richmond Town. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  2. ^ Robert Pigott. New York's Legal Landmarks: A Guide to Legal Edifices, Institutions, Lore, History, and Curiosities on the City's Streets, New York: Attorney Street Editions (2014), p. 170. ISBN 978-0-61599-283-9

External links[edit]

40°34′15″N 74°8′44″W / 40.57083°N 74.14556°W / 40.57083; -74.14556