Federal Building And U.S. Post Office (Fargo, North Dakota)
NDSU Archives states:
A new Post Office was built in 1970. Shown above, the Post Office is located on the northwest corner of Roberts Street and Second Avenue north. The building was dedicated on Friday, June 26, 1970, at 10am. A 30 minute band concert preceded the event. Among the dignitaries attending the dedication were Governor William L. Guy, Fargo Mayor Herschel Lashkowitz, Senators Milton R. Young and Quentin Burdick, and Representatives Thomas Kleppe and Mark Andrews.
It is one of 24 federal buildings owned by the General Services Administration in North Dakota in 2021.
Note a large number of North Dakota post offices built during 1900-1940 were reviewed in a 1989 study, resulting in immediate NRHP listing of 12 to add to the eight previously listing. Others may have been listed since then in accordance with standards laid out in that study. This 1969 building may be the most recently built post office so far listed in North Dakota.
It is termed mid-century modern in RoadsideArchitecture.com.
It was built by T.F. Powers Construction Co., which opened in 1893 after downtown Fargo was largely destroyed by fire.
Flooding in Fargo led to this location handling more mail in 2009, when the post office annex at 4007 33rd St., NW, was flooded.
Notes
- ^ It may be verified by review of all North Dakota listings.
References
- ^ "Weekly List 2021 06 11". National Park Service.
- ^ "This 123-year-old company has built many of Fargo-Moorhead's Landmarks". October 15, 2016.
- ^ "TF Powers Construction Co. / Building Your Legacy - Since 1893".
- ^ "Fargo's Federal Building listed on the National Register of Historic Places". 2021.
- ^ "Fargo, North Dakota: Its History and Images: Federal Buildings and Post Offices". North Dakota State University.
- ^ "North Dakota Federal Buildings".
- ^ Dr. Norene A. Roberts; Joe D. Roberts (1989). National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation: U. S. Post Offices in North Dakota, 1900-1940 (Report).
- ^ "Mid-Century Modern Architecture in North Dakota". RoadsideArchitecture.com. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
- ^ "Fargo, North Dakota: Its History and Images: Fire of 1893". North Dakota State University. Archived from the original on July 5, 2015. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ "Mail Service impacted by recent flooding". March 31, 2009.