The 115-year-old courthouse is now a museum that tells the story of the author Harper Lee.
The south Alabama courthouse linked to Harper Lee's novel"To Kill a Mockingbird" is receiving a preservation grant.
The program Partners in Preservation says the old Monroe County Courthouse in Monroeville is receiving $125,000 to repair serious structural problems in a wall.The 115-year-old old courthouse is now a museum that tells the story of Lee and fellow writer Truman Capote, who were both from Monroeville. Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning book used the red-brick courthouse as the model for a pivotal trial scene in her story of racial injustice. The two-story courtroom was then recreated as a Hollywood set for the 1962 movie based on Lee's novel.
Partners in Preservation is a project of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and American Express.
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