Old Customs House (Knoxville, Tennessee)

Old Post Office Building
The Old Customs House, as photographed by the Detroit Publishing Company in the early 1900s
Location Clinch Avenue and Market Street
Knoxville, Tennessee
Coordinates 35°57′49″N 83°55′7″W / 35.96361°N 83.91861°W / 35.96361; -83.91861Coordinates: 35°57′49″N 83°55′7″W / 35.96361°N 83.91861°W / 35.96361; -83.91861
Architect Alfred B. Mullett[1]
Architectural style Renaissance Revival
NRHP Reference # 73001804[2]
Added to NRHP March 20, 1973[1]

The Old Customs House, also called the Old Post Office, is a historic building located at the corner of Clinch Avenue and Market Street in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. Completed in 1874, it was the city's first federal building. It housed the federal courts, excise offices and post office until 1933. From 1936 to 1976, it was used by the Tennessee Valley Authority for offices. Expanded in 2004, the building is currently home to the East Tennessee History Center, which includes the Lawson McGhee Library's Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection, the Knox County Archives, and the East Tennessee Historical Society's headquarters and museum. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural significance.[1]

Design

The Old Customs House is a three-story Italianate style building sheathed in East Tennessee marble. The smooth exterior walls contrast with rusticated quoins at the building's corners.[1] The former courtroom on the third floor is notable for its neoclassical detailing. Much of the original interior has been altered.[1]

History

The Customs House is situated on what was originally Lot 11 of James White's 1795 extension of Knoxville.[3] An 1871 map of Knoxville shows the property as an open grove surrounded by a few small houses.[4]

The Old Customs House, as it appeared in 1886

Throughout the 1850s, Congress was petitioned by cities across the country to provide courtrooms and post offices. Congress was reluctant to provide funding for buildings that only contained judicial and postal functions, so the title "Customs House" was typically used instead of "courthouse" or "post office." Congress was viewed as more agreeable to providing construction funding if excise taxes collected from foreign imports were linked to projects, since taxes generated revenue.

Congress originally appropriated funding for Knoxville's Customs House in 1856, and reappropriated the funding in 1869.[5] Construction of the original portion of the Customs House (at the corner of Clinch and Market), designed by U.S. government chief architect Alfred B. Mullett (1834–1890), began in 1871 and was completed in 1874.[5] The first floor was used as a post office, while the second and third floors were used for the federal court and as office space for various federal officials, namely postal inspectors, pension agents, court officials, and internal-revenue officers.[6]

As Knoxville's population quadrupled in the late 19th century, the increased postal activity left the Customs House critically overcrowded,[6] and thus the building was enlarged in 1910.[7] A 1913 government document describes the building as "clean and well kept," with a "large and roomy" workroom for postal employees. The document stated that the building had its own steam plant for heating, and used electricity provided by the Knoxville Railway & Light Company.[8]

Knoxville's continued growth rendered the Customs House insufficient for the city's postal needs, and a new post office was built on Main Street in 1934.[7] Ownership of the Customs House was transferred to the newly created Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) for use as office space.[7] Along with the Customs House, TVA maintained offices in the nearby Arnstein Building and in the Daylight Building on Union Avenue. Following the completion of the TVA Towers in 1976, ownership of the Customs House was transferred to Knox County for use by the Lawson McGhee Library's Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection, and the Knox County Archives.[7]

In the 1980s, the East Tennessee Historical Society (ETHS), which had been using the McClung Collection's office equipment and staff, moved into the Customs House, and set up the East Tennessee Historical Center. The Society initially used the second floor of the Customs House, but moved to the first floor in 1992.[9] The Society opened the Museum of East Tennessee History the following year.[10] In 2000, the second-floor corridor of the building was named "Deaderick Hall" in honor of librarian Lucile Deaderick (19142006).[11]

In 2004, a BarberMcMurry-designed eastern extension to the Customs House was completed, extending the structure the length of Clinch Avenue from Market to Gay Street.[12] This new complex, known as the East Tennessee History Center, includes the ETHS's headquarters, the Museum of East Tennessee History, the Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection, and the Knox County Archives. The Old Customs House is depicted in the ETHS logo.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Ellen Beasley, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form for Old Post Office Building, 1 November 1972.
  2. Staff (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  3. Samuel G. Heiskell, Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History (Nashville: Ambrose Printing Company, 1918), p. 60.
  4. A. Ruger, "Bird's Eye View of the City of Knoxville, Knox County, Tennessee," 1871.
  5. 1 2 United States Treasury Department, A History of Public Buildings Under the Control of the Treasury Department (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1901), p. 553.
  6. 1 2 L.M. Shaw, H.C. Payne, P.C. Knox, Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, Postmaster-General, and Attorney-General Reporting in Regard to the Government Building at Knoxville, Tenn., 4 December 1902. Retrieved: 17 October 2011.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), pp. 135, 170.
  8. Presidential Commission on Economy and Efficiency, United States Post Office and Courthouse, Knoxville, Tenn., 8 January 1913, p. 888. Retrieved: 17 October 2011.
  9. W. Todd Groce, "A Brief History of the East Tennessee Historical Society," Journal of East Tennessee History, Vol. 66 (1994), pp. 1-9.
  10. "Museum of East Tennessee History Opens Tuesday," Knoxville News-Sentinel, 14 March 1993.
  11. Jack Neely, "Lucile Deaderick, 1914-2006: The Legacy of an Uncommon Life," Metro Pulse, 23 November 2006. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 5 October 2015.
  12. BarberMcMurry, East Tennessee History Center. Retrieved: 17 October 2011.

Sources

External links

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