Capitolshots Photography
  • Capitols
  • Courthouses
  • City Halls
  • Other Photos

Images tagged "jourdanton"

A photo of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of the cornerstone of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of a historical marker on the grounds of the Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  Designed by Henry T. Phelps and completed in 1912, the Jourdanton courthouse is the only surviving Mission Revival courthouse in Texas.  The Atascosa County Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Texas Historic Landmark.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
An image of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This image © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
A photo of a historical marker on the grounds of a replica of the first Atascosa County Courthouse in Jourdanton, Texas.  The original log cabin courthouse was built in 1856 in Amphion, about nine miles to the northwest of Jourdanton, the current county seat.  The replica, a Texas Historic Landmark, stands just to the south of the current Atascosa County Courthouse.  This photo © Capitolshots Photography/TwoFiftyFour Photos, LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Email Capitolshots Photography • All Photos © Capitolshots Photography. All rights reserved. No reproduction in any form is authorized without the express written consent of Capitolshots Photography.