Ramsey County's third courthouse, which opened in 1932, is a treasure trove of wood, stone, sculpture, and Art Deco style.
The first two Ramsey County courthouses were conventional in appearance and did not last long (the first from 1851 to 1889, the second from 1889 to 1932.) The third, designed with care for a mature city and county, proved to be durable functionally and a work of imagination in its architecture and details.
When the second courthouse began to rise in 1885, Ramsey County was in the midst of a population boom that took it from 45,890 people in 1880 to 139,796 in 1890. By 1920, St. Paul's population had grown to 234,698 and the county's to 244,554. Within five years a grand jury found the courthouse "antiquated [and] inconvenient." No government building could have adapted well to such growth.
Serious planning to replace it began in 1927. Planners set the budget at $4 million and raised the money through a city bond issue in 1928. In October 1929 came the stock market crash and an economic contraction that reduced the costs of materials and labor for construction. City and county officials used the unexpected budget flexibility to buy finer woods and stone for their beauty.
Beauty had been part of the plan all along. The architects, Holabird and Root of Chicago, were masters of moderne, also called Art Deco, the then-fashionable style famous for sleekness of form and simplicity of ornament. Chicago's magnificent Board of Trade is their masterpiece.
For exterior decoration they hired Lee Lawrie, the most successful American architectural sculptor of his time. Lawrie had designed sculpture for the Nebraska and Louisiana capitols, and almost all the outdoor sculpture at Rockefeller Center in New York. For Ramsey County he designed the medallions—a star, a beehive, a castle, and others—that circle the building. He also created the relief sculptures at the north and south entrances.
Over the north entrance Lawrie composed a street scene of regular people under the motto vox populi, voice of the people. For the stylized figures that flank the south doors he used an Assyrian style to suggest good government and both the urban and rural parts of Ramsey County.
For the main hall the building commissioners chose Swedish sculptor Carl Milles. After three rejected designs and an absence of several months, Milles showed up with Indian God of Peace (since renamed Vision of Peace). The thirty-six-foot tower of Mexican onyx portrays a stylized American Indian spirit rising out of the smoke of peace pipes. Nothing in the piece suggests St. Paul, yet it soon became an emblem of the city.
The halls on the seventeen floors feature twenty varieties of marble from around the world. More than twenty different types of wood were used in the halls, courtrooms, and offices. Some of them became so rare that they could not be replaced.
The tall murals in the city council chambers, by John Norton, tell the conventional story of the building of Midwestern cities with images of woodsmen, surveyors, steamboats, and railroads. The main floor elevator doors by John Stewart are made of brightly polished brass. They repeat themes from the murals and the Lawrie reliefs—nature, machines, work, progress.
The most striking room in the building is the main hall, Memorial Hall. The walls, a deep blue, almost black Belgian marble, are carved with the names of Ramsey County war dead from World War I forward. Carl Milles's bright white Vision of Peace and the polished-gold, mirrored plate-glass ceiling bring light to a surprisingly dark space.
The building houses the Ramsey County commissioners, St. Paul's mayor and city council members, most Ramsey County judges and courtrooms, and several city offices. Between 1932 and 1988, hard use and changing times took their toll. A $48 million renovation, made between 1989 and 1992 modernized the operating systems. It also restored some lost luster to parts of the building, including the then-hidden gold leaf ceiling of the main hall.