Harper Lee’s Sale of the Atticus Finch Law Office

Harper Lee's Sale of the Atticus Finch Law Office

Author Harper Lee’s father, an Alabama lawyer, was the inspiration behind her character Atticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbird”.  Now his former law office, itself a former bank, is up for sale.

Harper Lee’s latest novel “Go Set a Watchman” has created a major fuss that has both delighted and angered critics.

Her fans can now have the opportunity to buy the red brick building owned by her father Amasa Coleman Lee who practised law there in their hometown Monroeville.

For sale: The old bank building that once housed the office of author Harper Lee's father A.C. Lee on the courthouse square in Monroeville, Alabama

Her father A.C. Lee, who practiced law in the building

A.C. Lee, served in the Alabama legislature and became a staunch supporter of the civil rights that African Americans were forced to fight for in the country that they lived.

His old law office, a reddish colored two-story building, has been empty for at least a decade.

Lee’s law firm moved into the second floor of the bank after a fire destroyed their previous location in 1928 and remained there until moving to a newer bank building in 1972

Atticus Finch was portrayed by Gregory Peck (pictured) in the 1962 film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird

Atticus Finch was portrayed by Gregory Peck (pictured) in the 1962 film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird

The vacant 6000 sq ft property is undoubtedly a piece of literary history. In Lee’s new book the law office is where Finch receives a dressing-down.

The character, who was beloved for his sense of racial fairness in To Kill A Mocking Bird, is outed as a racist in Lee’s new book.

His attitude appears to mirror that of Lee’s own father’s who held anti-integration views in the late 1950s. Views, which he apparently changed before his death in 1962.

Source: The Daily Mail

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