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Not What You Meant?  There are 53 definitions for U.S. Post Office.

U.S. Post Office (Ellenville, New York)

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U.S. Post Office
(U.S. National Register of Historic Places)
The Ellenville post office ca. 2007
The Ellenville post office ca. 2007
Location: Ellenville, NY
Nearest city: Kingston
Coordinates: 41°43′03″N, 74°23′37″W
Built/Founded: 1940
Architect: Louis Bouche, R. Stanley-Brown
Architectural style(s): Colonial Revival
Added to NRHP: 1988
NRHP Reference#: 88002496
Governing body: U.S. Postal Service

The U.S. Post Office in Ellenville, New York, United States, serves the ZIP code 12428, which covers Ellenville and much of the surrounding town of Wawarsing. It is located on Liberty Place in the center of the village. The building was one of many post offices in the region which were built of stone, reflecting the historical Dutch influence in the Hudson Valley, during the New Deal by the Works Progress Administration. President Franklin D. Roosevelt personally approved the design.[1] As a native of the region, he understood the importance of stone architecture and made sure that new post offices in the region were built in that style. In late 1939, villagers in Ellenville sent Roosevelt a telegram which complained that their new post office was to be brick, despite the presence of pre-Revolutionary stone houses in Ellenville's location, the Rondout Valley.[1] "I will stop this brick right away!" he vowed in response, and two days before construction bidding began, he sent the project back to the drawing board. The final building combined features typical of stone houses throughout the region.[1] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

References

  1. ^ a b c FDR and Dutchess County Stone Buildings, retrieved from marist.edu March 22, 2007.

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U.S. Post Office (Ellenville, New York) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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