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Apr 27, 2024 - Sat
Bolton United States
Wind 2 m/s, SSE
Pressure 774.07 mmHg
43°F
scattered clouds
Humidity 71%
Clouds 45%
sat04/27 sun04/28 mon04/29 tue04/30 wed05/01
55/47°F
58/60°F
49/47°F
49/50°F
54/49°F
Apr 27, 2024 - Sat
Bolton United States
Wind 2 m/s, SSE
Pressure 774.07 mmHg
43°F
scattered clouds
Humidity 71%
Clouds 45%
sat04/27 sun04/28 mon04/29 tue04/30 wed05/01
55/47°F
58/60°F
49/47°F
49/50°F
54/49°F

Workers Discover, Restore Original Wood Floors in Old Lake George Courthouse

The Lake George Historical Museum is housed in the former Warren County courthouse, built in the decades between 1845 and 1878.

To the annoyance and frustration of the directors of the Lake George Historical Association, which operates the museum, and the Supervisor and Board of the Town of Lake George, which owns the building, the courthouse has not always been treated with the respect a museum of local history, let alone a historic building, deserves.

In recent years though, things have begun to change.

Lake George Supervisor Dennis Dickinson ordered the windows and the 19th century clock face, all of which were damaged by a hailstorm, to be replaced.

This past year, under the direction of Jim Martino, the head of the town’s Buildings and Grounds department, the wood floors of the courtroom were restored.

Since 1970, the year the building was rededicated by Governor Nelson Rockefeller as the Lake George Institute of History, Art and Science, the floors have laid under plywood and carpet.

“We didn’t know what was under there, or what condition it would be in,” said Martino.

Once it was determined that there was, indeed, a wood floor beneath the carpet, Martino consulted with Tom Devlin, the owner of Northern Hardwoods.

Devlin identified the wood as ash. Martino says that its probably the floor that was laid down in 1845.

“Look at the burn marks where the coal stove was,” said Martino. “The random sized widths suggest they used whatever was available from a local mill.”

The floor’s condition “was not good, but not so bad that it had to be taken up and replaced,” said Martino.

Restoring the floor occupied much of his department’s winter, said Martino.

“If we weren’t in here working on the floor, we were shoveling snow,” he said.

The town crew also built a new platform for the judge’s bench and the witness box and helped rearrange the room, which is the museum’s primary exhibition space.

“We all collaborated,” said Lisa Adamson, the museum’s curator.

According to Alex Parrot, the president of the historical association’s board of directors, the restoration of the courtroom floor was made possible by a grant from the Alfred Z. Solomon Charitable Trust, a Saratoga-based foundation.

Enough money remains from the grant to refinish the floors in the foyer and adjoining rooms.

“Without the contribution of the town’s time and labor, none of this would have been possible,” said Parrot. “We used the grant to pay for materials, and they did the rest.”