Architect
James G. Hill designed the building, and it was constructed partially under the supervision of architect
Abner Cook. The courthouse was completed in 1879 at a cost of $200,000. The
United States District Court for the Western District of Texas met there from then until 1936. One of its most noted trials occurred in February 1898, when
William Sidney Porter – the man who later became known under the pen name of
O. Henry – was tried and convicted of
embezzlement. It was acquired by the
University of Texas System in 1968 and renamed for the author, who had previously resided nearby in what is now officially called the
William Sidney Porter House, but is better known as the O. Henry House. The building was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places on August 25, 1970. TSUS purchased O. Henry Hall in 2015 for $8.2 million. The UT System leased it and continued using it as its administrative headquarters prior to the 2017 completion of the UT System's current headquarters. TSUS did the move so it could have a single administrative office in Downtown; it formerly occupied three different downtown buildings operated by the state government. ==See also==