Jackson County Courthouse, Independence
In 1922, Truman won
election as county judge for eastern Jackson County as a candidate of the
Pendergast faction of the Democratic party. He failed to be reelected in
1924, but then won election as presiding judge in 1926. He served in this
position, in effect as county commissioner, for eight
years.
He divided his time between the two Jackson County courthouses in Independence
and Kansas City. His main accomplishments were to greatly improve county
finances, to build a 230-mile county road system, a county hospital, and
a new county courthouse in Kansas City, and to remodel the courthouse in
Independence.
"...Everybody respected Truman," Edgar Hinde, a longtime friend and political associate of Truman's remembered. "...He ran the county in the proper manner and he conducted himself in the same way. He had a lot of power, I'll tell you. He had a lot of followers... He was absolutely honest in everything he did." (Edgar G. Hinde oral history interview.) Truman dedicated an enlarged and remodeled Independence courthouse (pictured) on September 7, 1933.
The
Jackson County Courthouse stands on Independence Square. For more information
contact: Harry S. Truman Courtroom and Office, Independence Square Courthouse,
Room 109, Main at Maple Street, Indep., MO 64050, Phone: 816-881-4431.

