Lancaster Post Office Explained

Lancaster Post Office
Coordinates:42.8478°N -90.7119°W
Built:1938
Added:October 24, 2000
Area:less than one acre
Mpsub:United States Post Office Construction in Wisconsin MPS
Refnum:00001245

The Lancaster Post Office is a historic post office at 236 W. Maple Street in Lancaster, Wisconsin.[1]

History

The Lancaster Post Office opened in 1938, with George H. Cox serving as its first postmaster. It was one of several Wisconsin post offices built by the Public Works Administration in the 1930s; as the PWA commonly reused building designs, it was nearly identical to the Lake Geneva post office. In 1940, artist Tom Rost painted a mural on the interior as part of the Public Works of Art Project. Rost also painted murals in post offices in Elkhorn, Wisconsin and Paoli, Indiana, and he worked as an artist for the Milwaukee Journal in the 1930s. His mural in Lancaster, titled Farm Yard, depicts farmers working on a large hay wagon alongside chickens and pigs.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 236 MAPLE ST. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2018-09-05.
  2. Web site: Causier . Charles W. . Jurkiewicz . Joseph G. . National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lancaster Post Office . National Archives Catalog . . August 21, 2023 . December 29, 1993.