Metamora
It became the county seat in 1843 and a brick courthouse which still stands, was completed in 1845.
Tremont
Tazewell County's first county seat was where when Mr. Lincoln received a duel challenge from James Shields in 1843. Before the county seat was switched to Pekin in 1850, court sessions were held in a red brick courthouse built in 1839.
Pekin
It was part of the Eighth Circuit for seven years until 1857 when Tazewell County was removed from the Circuit. The courthouse was constructed in 1849 after the legislature approved switching the county seat from Tremont.
Bloomington
This was the site of one of the circuit's busiest but less pretentious courthouses, completed in 1836. It was home to David Davis, Jesse Fell, and Leonard Swett – all legal and political collaborators of Mr. Lincoln.
Danville
The courthouse was a brick building where Mr. Lincoln often practiced with Ward Hill Lamon until Lamon became the circuit's prosecutor.
Urbana
A brick courthouse was built in 1848. Leonard Swett and Henry C. Whitney frequently served as Mr. Lincoln's co-counsel here.
Paris
In 1842, Mr. Lincoln began his practice here in a frame courthouse that was already almost two decades old.
Sullivan
When the county was created in 1843, it became part of the circuit. A square brick courthouse stood until it burned in 1865.
Shelbyville
This community was a long way from other towns on the Eighth Circuit. In 1852, a brick courthouse replaced a more humble edifice.
Taylorville
This was literally the "last stop" on the circuit until 1853. Its simple frame courthouse, was finished in 1840 and usually visited before Mr. Lincoln returned to Springfield.
Springfield
Springfield was Mr. Lincoln's home town as well the state capital as well as the county seat of in Sangamon County. It was also the site of the U.S. District Court and the Illinois Supreme Court, before which Mr. Lincoln often practiced.
Mount Pulaski
The town was the second county seat of Logan County. Court was held there until 1856 when the county seat was moved to Lincoln, a town which Mr. Lincoln himself how surveyed.
Lincoln
The courthouse went into operation in 1856, burned in 1857 and was replaced the following year. It was the third county seat. A reproduction of the first courthouse in Postville, where Mr. Lincoln practiced in the 1840s, was built in 1953.
Clinton
The courthouse for two decades was the site of many Lincoln trials – and supposedly his first meeting with future Civil War General George B. McClellan. It was located on what is now called "Mr. Lincoln's Square."
Decatur
A simple log courthouse was under construction when Mr. Lincoln first visited the community as a 22-year moving with his family from Indiana.
Monticello
Less is known about the courthouse here than about the nearby Bryant Cottage in Bement, where plans for the Lincoln-Douglas Debates were formulated.