Constructed by the
Works Progress Administration during the
New Deal, the building served as the home of the
Supreme Court of Virginia (formerly known as the Supreme Court of Appeals per the inscription above the Broad Street entrance) until it moved to the renovated former Federal Reserve Building in 1978. The entrance facing the capitol refers to the Virginia State Library, now known as the
Library of Virginia, which moved to a new building at Ninth and Broad Streets (as well as an offsite storage annex) in 1996. The Supreme Court and Library had moved from the
Virginia State Library-Oliver Hill Building in 1939. This building's former reading rooms also temporarily housed
Virginia General Assembly sessions in 2006 and 2007, during renovations to the capitol. The building was added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 2005, under its former name. , the building housed the Governor's office as well as other government offices.
Historical marker In 2017, the
Virginia Department of Historic Resources dedicated a state
historical marker outside the building. It tells the story of
Richard and Mildred Loving, the plaintiffs in the 1967 Supreme Court case
Loving v. Virginia which overturned Virginia's law against
interracial marriage. The building was chosen as the site of the marker because it housed the Supreme Court of Appeals, where the Lovings' case was heard. The marker reads: :"
Loving v. Virginia :Richard Loving and Mildred Jeter, defined under Virginia's
1924 Racial Integrity Act as an interracial couple, married in June 1958 in Washington, D.C., and returned home to
Caroline County. Arrested in July for violating Virginia's laws against interracial marriage, the Lovings were convicted and sentenced to one year in jail, suspended on the condition that they leave Virginia. In 1963 they obtained help from the
American Civil Liberties Union, which unsuccessfully sought to reverse their convictions in the state courts of Virginia and then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which, in the case Loving v. Virginia (1967), overturned all state laws restricting marriage on the basis of race." ==References==