The Beltrami County Courthouse, located at 619 Beltrami Avenue in Bemidji, is a three-story red brick and sandstone structure in the Beaux Arts style and the county’s most imposing example of public architecture.
After Beltrami County was organized in 1897, local court proceedings took place in a cold, drafty building on the corner of Fourth Street and Beltrami Avenue. The county grew quickly, and by 1902, citizens were pushing for a new courthouse. Voters approved a bond issue of $50,000, to be used for a new jail and courthouse, in an election held on March 11, 1902. Although two saloon owners, Olia Olson and Stener T. Odegard from Shevlin, challenged the legality of the bond election, a judge dismissed their case on June 7, 1902, and construction of the new courthouse began.
At the time, Beltrami County already owned all of the land in Block Seven, between Sixth and Seventh Streets, which was only a few blocks north of the old courthouse. Architects Kinney & Detweiler of Minneapolis drew up plans for a Beaux Arts-style building, square in shape, to be constructed out of red sandstone and bricks from a local brickyard.
A bid of $39,975 from Schmidt Bros. was accepted on May 24, 1902, with the understanding that the courthouse would be ready for occupancy by December 1, 1902. O. M. Jellestad spent thirteen nights at the old building guarding the auditor’s and treasurer’s records after vault doors were removed to new courthouse. The County Board of Commissioners approved the building on December 12, 1902; the court held its first session in the space on January 3, 1903.
The courthouse’s most striking feature is its rotunda, which occupies the center of the main hall on the first floor and extends past the second floor into the dome. A railing surmounted by a brass guard rail circles the rotunda on the second floor. On the exterior, a convex dome rises above an arcaded tower topped by a statue of blind Justice with her scale.
The space intended for a clock served as an open-sky observation point during the Cold War. During the 1950s, volunteers stationed in the cupola watched for uncharted planes entering Bemidji airspace (this area was later glassed in).
When the building first opened, visitors reached the courtroom via a double flight of stairs. The courtroom, which had covered half of the third floor, was remodeled and condensed to make space for offices in 1937.
In 1971, County Auditor Wayne Alsop noticed a staircase inside the courthouse leading to an attic. Inside it, he and Jay Griggs discovered artifacts and written records, including tax books dating to 1897, underneath rafters more than ten inches thick. They also found the scales originally held by the statue of Justice, which had fallen down during a 1971 storm and been moved to the attic for storage.
Construction of a large annex began in June 1973 and ended in July 1974. The finished structure housed two courtrooms on its first floor, and court personnel moved from the old courthouse to the annex in July 1974.
In 1976, the county remodeled the old courtroom into office space. On December 13, 1977, one day after the courthouse celebrated its Diamond Jubilee, the board of commissioners received bids for a complete remodeling at an anticipated price of $425,000.
The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 16, 1988. Thanks to a $20,000 matching grant from the Minnesota Historical Society, it was renovated in 2000. The grant money funded the restoration of the stairs, pillars, and retaining walls at the building’s east entrance facing Beltrami Avenue Northwest.