Palmyra
before anyone noticed
Whenever I drive to Charlottesville, Virginia, on Highway 15, I pause at a small courthouse that rests acropolis-like above the village of Palmyra.
I like the courthouse. Its shapely columns and brick walk suggest an approachable, friendly kind of government.
New towns with classical Greek names like Palmyra flourished in the first 50 years of the Republic. Thomas Jefferson and his friends saw architecture as a civilizing force. And to Jefferson, Greek democracy and Greek architecture offered the correct guidelines for constructing a new society in America.
That was in 1831, when Palmyra courthouse was built with plain brick columns and painted wood.
Nowadays, courthouses in our big cities are the size of teaching hospitals. As our society and laws grow more complex, it’s refreshing to pause beside a building that represents democracy at a human scale.
In the valleys around Palmyra, farmers grow corn and soy beans beside forage land for hay. Their houses are shaded by trees.
Bats fly along the Rivanna River nearby, feeding on mosquitoes and mayfly then disappear before anyone notices.