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Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary
RICHMOND |
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United States Post Office and Custom House
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Built in 1858 to house Richmond’s Federal customs house, post office, and courthouse, the original portion of the United States Post Office and Custom House is an imposing Italianate building. Its exterior is of local “Petersburg” granite, while the interior makes extensive use of cast iron structural components. Ammi B. Young, supervising architect of the U.S. Treasury Department, designed the original center section. Young, an important architect of the period, was the designer of a number of innovative government buildings in the middle of the 19th century in cities throughout the United States.
For much of the 19th century the building represented
the extent of the Federal Government in Richmond. During that period,
it housed the customs house, post office, and Federal courts under one
roof. Later additions expanded the building to its current proportions.
Mifflin E. Bell, the Federal supervising architect of that era, provided
direction for the addition of one-bay-wide wings at the corner of the
building in 1887-89. Additional expansions took place in 1910 and the
early 1930s. These enlargements used the same locally quarried granite
as the original section and continued the use of the Italianate style.
The continuity of style and material has made the expansion of the building
into its present-day three-part architectural composition relatively seamless. |
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