List of courthouses in the United States

American courthouses are very often significant, as they are public buildings usually built to convey solidity and to command respect.

Many have hosted important trials, or are significant for their architecture, and thus many have been designated as historic sites.

This list includes state, county, city, town and other municipalities' courthouses, as well as subsuming U.S. Federal courthouses (which are also listed at List of United States federal courthouses).

Variations on county seats include: Federal courthouses in Alabama are listed here.

Alaska has boroughs and non-borough census areas.

For current county courthouses, including some that are historic, see List of county courthouses in Illinois#Current.

However, the Old U.S. Customshouse and Post Office and Fireproof Storage Company Warehouse, in Louisville, Kentucky, also served as a Federal district courthouse.

Future Kentucky governor Thomas Metcalfe was one of the builders.

It is included in the Downtown Greensburg Historic District.

There are in fact at least five distinct types of non-Federal courts in Mississippi: County and other non-Federal courthouses, historical and current, include:

Federal courthouses in North Carolina are listed here.

County courthouses in North Carolina are listed here.

Federal courthouses in North Dakota are listed here.

State and County courthouses in Pennsylvania are listed here.

Federal courthouses in Rhode Island are listed here.

Also from category, to check: Federal courthouses in South Carolina are listed here.

County courthouses in South Carolina are listed here.

Federal courthouses in South Dakota are listed here.

County courthouses in Texas are partially listed here.

Federal courthouses in the state of Washington are listed here.

Federal courthouses in West Virginia are listed here.

Federal courthouses in United States territories are listed here.

Old Courthouse, Greensburg, KY