Posted on 06/29/2026 9:50:22 AM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
Not long ago, I stood with others on the lawn of the Kootenai County Courthouse, watching the experts from Dobson Chimney and Masonry carefully remove a time capsule that was placed in the building’s cornerstone when it was dedicated in 1926. As we waited, I looked around to see what other bits of history from a century ago surrounded me.
Across Government Way, I could see the old Roosevelt School. That had certainly been there in 1926. A block away, I could see the Hamilton House, the home of Coeur d’Alene’s second mayor. That had been there too. I knew that neighborhoods like the Fort Grounds, Garden District and Sanders Beach were around in 1926. Old Coeur d’Alene City Hall, the Masonic Temple and other buildings along Sherman were there, too. Ditto some of the old farmsteads scattered throughout the county.
In what is now a below-surface-level parking lot across Government Way, you can still see a portion of the long-sealed entrance to the tunnel where the old Milwaukee Railroad had become a subway. In 1926, nearby Government Way had not yet been constructed, and the rail tracks diving below-ground were surely a prominent feature across from the new courthouse site. But these surviving pieces of history only tell part of the story.
By 1926, Coeur d’Alene had moved past its Wild West origins. The soldiers, saloons and brothels were long gone. Coeur d’Alene was now a respectable city. The stately new county courthouse bore witness to that. The “Roaring Twenties” were in full swing, but Kootenai County wasn’t like the urban landscape of gangsters and wild Gatsbyesque parties that we see in the old movies. But there were bootleggers. Prohibition was in effect, and the county’s proximity to Canada, which was still “wet,” and the area’s dense forestation, made it an ideal locale to smuggle liquor and avoid the law.
When the courthouse was built, Kootenai County was still quite rural, home to approximately 19,000 people. Coeur d’Alene was a blue-collar town of around 7,000 souls. There were six major timber mills and four railroads. With the growing popularity of automobiles, tourism was becoming more of an economic driver.
But those cars were still sharing the roads with horses, and those roads were still largely unpaved. You could buy a new Model T touring car for roughly $295, but that was still out of reach for many folks. A new house would set you back less than $5,000. Or, if you were on a budget, you could buy a house much cheaper by ordering it from the Sears Catalog. The only catch was that it would arrive in thousands of pieces that you would have to assemble yourself.
You heated your house with wood or coal and kept your food fresh with blocks of ice cut from a local lake and delivered to your door by the ice man. Most homes had electricity, but home telephones were rare, and outhouses still dotted the landscape.
There were still steamboats on Lake Coeur d’Alene then, but they were in decline. Some had already been scuttled, and 1926 would be the last full year of operation for the Georgie Oakes, the “Queen of the Lake.” In 1927, that grand old boat would be set ablaze to celebrate the Fourth of July. Its remains still lie at the bottom of the lake.
So here we are, 100 years later, wondering what other glimpses of the past are hidden in the sealed copper time capsule that has lived in the dark of the Courthouse cornerstone for 100 years.
Masons remove bricks from around a cornerstone at the old Kootenai County courthouse.
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I had to laugh...they are protecting the granite cornerstone with Scotch-Brite pads!
My mom's folks retired to just north of CdA in 1966 from Potlatch, ID (where mom grew up). We used to visit them every couple years, so I've got fond memories of the area. That's one of the reasons we bought there eight years ago. I thought we were buying a vacation home, but my wife fell in love with Idaho so much, it became our permanent home. Adios, CA!
The Kootenai County Courthouse is a grand civic building designed by architects who were excellent and who paid homage to the great traditions of the Greeks and Romans. It's rather unlike the recently completed monument to the world's greatest egotist in Chicago.

Back when it was constructed...
Back then they still knew how to design a beautiful building.
Not so much now. Symmetry is a thing of the past. Ugly is apparently our future.
Ugly is a Socialist thing. Hence, Obama's Library.
Gack!! You totally ruined my post!
I apologies profusely.
I have a real problem with modern architecture and its lack of estique beauty.
Obama’s library is the most recent and most glaring example of how art has been perverted in modern times. That humble small town county courthouse is the Taj Mahal in comparison.
Woe unto those who call Beauty ugly and ugly beauty.
One hundred years from now, people will wonder what was wrong with Barak Obama.
This building was the least of his problems.
Obama’s library is a pimple on the ass that is Chicago.

Thulsa Doom's Mountain of Power.
Ugly yes. But not Obama Ugly
It does have symmetry.
I lived in cda many years ago and absollutely loved it. Nextdoor neighbor was a gay guy who owned a coouple of beauty salons. He and I did beautiful gardens, and coordinated our colors. Our cats even got along. My dog wasn’t thrilled about that but she behaved.
Needless to say, our houses were the best on the street. wish I still lived there.
drove past those houses recently. Yuk, painted dull brown, no flowers. Looked serious terrible. all of the downtown charm was gone too. sweet little stores and restaurants were’t charming or good any more. and at the cda Hotel, a bunch of arabic guys were pushing little old ladies out of their way, including me.
Off with their heads
Ugly architecture and art is intentional.
It has to be in architecture at least because it also has to be engineered safely.
And in my opinion Obama's architect had to go out of his way to make the building ugly. A structure that is Asymmetrical will be more difficult to make structurally safe.
Art that is ugly I would guess that it to must be intensional.
I certainly think that Picasso intended his work to be ugly.
Why it became popular, I can't imagine.
Probably because the right people said that it was good.
Obama’s presidential center looks like a trash can to me.
I can see that.
The memes have been pretty funny!
Obama has introduced the Age of the Ashcan. Democrats can be proud.
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