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Lincoln City Hall is the former seat of the Lincoln, Nebraska city government. The hall was built from 1874-1879 as the U.S. Post Office and Court House, designed by the office of the U.S. Treasury Department's architect, Alfred B. Mullett. A new post office and court house was built in 1906 and the property was transferred to the city.
U.S. Post Office: Hastings? D. Neb. 1907–1955 Completed in 1905. Razed in the 1970s. n/a Old City Hall† Lincoln: 920 East O Street: D. Neb. 1879–1906 Now in use by city agencies. n/a U.S. Courthouse & Post Office: Lincoln: 129 North 10th Street: D. Neb. 1906–1969 Now a mixed-use facility. n/a Robert V. Denney Federal Building: Lincoln ...
United States Post Office (O'Neill, Nebraska) United States Post Office (Ogallala, Nebraska) United States Post Office (Pawnee City, Nebraska) United States Post Office (Schuyler, Nebraska) United States Post Office (Scottsbluff, Nebraska) United States Post Office and Courthouse (Norfolk, Nebraska) United States Post Office-Valentine; Geneva ...
Off Nebraska Highway 14: Raeville: German-Catholic religious complex comprising a 1910 three-story school, 1917 Romanesque Revival church, 1920 Colonial Revival rectory, parish hall, cemetery, and orchard. [13] 6: US Post Office-Albion
Washington (200) (Street and PO box addresses), 900 Brentwood Rd. NE, Washington DC 20066-9998 Washington Government Mails Annex (202-205) (for mail destined to government buildings), 3300 V St NE, Washington DC 20018-1528 [ 5 ]
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Letter cases were used at many terminals to take care of advance work or unworked letters from railway post office (RPO) routes, while a few terminals handled parcel post almost exclusively. The largest terminal railway post office was the Penn Terminal in the G.P.O. Building in New York City, New York —in 1951, it had over 1,100 clerks.