United States Post Office (New Rochelle, New York)

US Post Office-New Rochelle
Location 255 North Ave. (corner of North Ave. and Huguenot St.), New Rochelle, New York
Coordinates 40°54′41.5″N 73°46′55″W / 40.911528°N 73.78194°W / 40.911528; -73.78194Coordinates: 40°54′41.5″N 73°46′55″W / 40.911528°N 73.78194°W / 40.911528; -73.78194
Built 1937
Architect Hart & Shape; Frost, David Hutchinson
Architectural style Moderne
MPS US Post Offices in New York State, 1858-1943, TR
NRHP Reference # 88002368[1]
Added to NRHP May 11, 1989

The main U.S. Post Office in New Rochelle (also known as New Rochelle Post Office) is located at 255 North Avenue, at the intersection of North Avenue and the Boston Post Road (South), in the city of New Rochelle in Westchester County, New York. The facility currently serves the 10801, 10803 and 10805 ZIP Codes, covering portions of New Rochelle and neighboring Pelham and Pelham Manor.

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989 as part of a Multiple Property Submission. It is one of 94 post offices in New York State that received artistic embellishment, either mural or sculpture, during the Depression through the New Deal art program.[2]

Post office building

New Rochelle was settled by French Huguenots, who purchased the site of the present city in 1687 and 1689 through Jacob Leisler, Acting Governor of the New York colony, from John Pell, Lord of the Manor of Pelham. The community grew around the original Huguenot settlement. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the area expanded rapidly as a commuter suburb of New York City. The population of the city at the time of construction of the present post office had reached 60,000. The first post office was established in 1799 with John Guion, a Huguenot descendant, the first postmaster. The post office was housed in various buildings until the construction of New Rochelle's first federal post office in 1915 on the site of the present post office. That building was demolished and the present post office was constructed between 1936 and 1938. It was authorized as part of the expanded public buildings programs initiated by the federal government to relieve unemployment caused by the Great Depression. The building was designed by New Rochelle resident Frederick Frost with Hart & Shape, Associate Architects.

As originally constructed, the New Rochelle Post Office was an outstanding example of public architecture in New York State. It was one of the few Art Moderne style post offices erected in the state. In addition, it was unusual for the terra-cotta clad exterior walls. Unfortunately, the terra cotta was replaced at an unknown date, probably in the 1960s, and the lobby was completely remodeled. Thus, the building has substantially lost its integrity of design and materials with the exception of three murals placed in the lobby in 1940, which still remain.

Murals

The New Rochelle Post Office is artistically significant for its distinctive intact group of murals commissioned by the United States Treasury Department as part of the public works projects initiated to relieve unemployment during the Great Depression.[3] The murals were painted by David Hutchinson, a local artist,[4] and installed in the two-year-old post office in 1940. The murals are typical of those painted under the public art programs of the period in that they depict historical scenes of local importance; however, they are distinguished by their large size and unusual shape. The main mural, entitled "The Huguenots Lay the Foundations of the City of New Rochelle" depicts a late seventeenth century scene of a group of French Huguenots building log cabins. The second mural, entitled "John Pell Receives Partial Payment for 6,000 Acres," depicts the purchase of the site of the present city by the Huguenots in the 1680s. The third mural, entitled "The Post Rider Brings News of the Battle of Lexington," depicts the community receiving news of the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, a popular theme for post offices in communities which participated in the war.[2] The central panel is about six feet by thirty-three-and-one-half feet while the latter two murals are approximately seven by fifteen feet each.

References

External links

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