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NewsSeptember 5, 2017

LITCHFIELD, Conn. -- George Beckwith got the surprising phone call a few months ago, informing him he soon would be an owner of a 19th-century courthouse in Connecticut, nearly 1,400 miles from his home in Missouri. The 78-year-old resident of Goodman, in southwestern Missouri, knew about the unusual lease agreement his ancestors had signed with Connecticut officials in 1803. ...

By DAVE COLLINS ~ Associated Press
People enter the Litchfield Judicial District Courthouse on Aug. 23 in Litchfield, Connecticut. The state of Connecticut closed the courthouse Friday and relocated operations to a new, $80 million courthouse in nearby Torrington.
People enter the Litchfield Judicial District Courthouse on Aug. 23 in Litchfield, Connecticut. The state of Connecticut closed the courthouse Friday and relocated operations to a new, $80 million courthouse in nearby Torrington.Dave Collins ~ Associated Press

LITCHFIELD, Conn. -- George Beckwith got the surprising phone call a few months ago, informing him he soon would be an owner of a 19th-century courthouse in Connecticut, nearly 1,400 miles from his home in Missouri.

The 78-year-old resident of Goodman, in southwestern Missouri, knew about the unusual lease agreement his ancestors had signed with Connecticut officials in 1803. If Connecticut ever stopped using the property in Litchfield for a courthouse, the parcel would revert to descendants of the six landowners who leased it to the state.

Beckwith never thought Connecticut would abandon the landmark 1889 courthouse, which features a Seth Thomas clock tower and lies along the historic Litchfield Green. But that's what was happening, his lawyer, Michael Rybak, told him in that phone call.

"Just out of the blue, the state of Connecticut got a hold of Mike Rybak, and they said they were going to hand over the keys," said Beckwith, who grew up in Litchfield. "It was certainly startling."

The state closed the Litchfield Judicial District Courthouse on Aug. 25 and transferred operations to a new $80 million courthouse a few miles away in Torrington.

Officials had planned to continue some judicial functions in the granite building after the move to Torrington but abandoned the idea because of the state budget deficit, judicial branch officials said.

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Beckwith said he had no use for a courthouse or the expenses that came with it, so he went looking for options before the state planned to hand it over Sept. 30. The search didn't take long.

The not-for-profit Greater Litchfield Preservation Trust has agreed to buy Beckwith's interest in the property for an undisclosed, below-market-value price, Rybak said.

The trust is the parent organization of two partnerships that own and operate two other buildings in Litchfield.

The trust intends to keep the building open and "repurpose" its use, said its attorney, Perley Grimes. There are no specific proposals yet, he said.

Ownership of the property actually will pass to Beckwith and his two late sisters' estates, which also are expected to sell their interests to the trust, said Rybak, who also represents the estates.

Descendants of the other land owners lost out on ownership rights because their interests were not legally passed down through the generations, Rybak said.

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