|
In
1794, federal mail service began in Rockville, known then as
Montgomery Court House. Stage coaches carried the mail along the
post road between George Town and Frederick (today’s route 355),
part of the new nation’s system of communications and post roads.
Local postmasters were selected for their political affiliations,
and for most of Rockville’s history our post office could be found
in the corner of a store on the main street.
By
the mid-1930s, Rockville’s population was about 1,500, County
government had erected the Grey Courthouse (today’s District Court),
and across the street arose a stately bank in the Art Deco style.
It was time for Rockville to have a permanent post office.
The
Federal Government paid $35,000 for the lot on the corner of
Montgomery and Washington Streets, then demolished the frame
buildings that had housed the Sentinel newspaper since 1855.
Construction began in November 1938 and cost $42,000. Rockville
celebrated the dedication of the Post Office on July 22, 1939 with a
parade watched by 3,000 people, a bevy of speeches, and a reception
for special guests at Glenview farm.
Rockville’s post office was one of 406 constructed under the Public
Works Administration (PWA). Despite the desire to complete projects
rapidly, PWA stressed the importance of high quality to ensure
“public works of an enduring character and lasting benefit.”
Architecturally, the English Georgian style post office blends
modern and classical elements. Smaller than similar buildings
erected in Bethesda and Silver Spring around the same time, perhaps
it reflects projections for Rockville’s future growth. One story
high with a corner hexagonal entrance tower, the brick and limestone
building anchors a prominent corner.
The
interior of Rockville’s Post Office is beautiful as well as
functional. Fifteen foot ceilings look down on terrazzo floors and
walls, the original bulletin boards and postal boxes, bronze
grilles, and a handsome mural. Most striking is the mural of
Sugarloaf Mountain by Judson Smith, which was sponsored by the
Treasury Department’s Fine Arts Section with funds based on one
percent of the total construction cost. In the 1990s, the original
brass and glass boxes were on the way out, but fortunately the
postmaster lent a sympathetic ear to long-time users and
preservationists and retained them in the lobby.
Many
a Rockville youth reported to the draft board in the tower room
above the post office. U.S. military recruiters moved into the
administrative offices after a new main post office facility opened
at 500 North Washington Street in 1965. By that time, new stations
had opened in Twinbrook and on Rollins Avenue. The General Services
Administration (GSA) took title to the property in 1949.
The
old Post Office was designated as a Rockville Historic District in
1979 and listed in the National Register of Historic Places in
1986. In addition to being a charming vestige of a streetscape lost
to urban renewal redevelopment, the 1939 post office was well used
for 67 years and beloved by its many patrons in Town Center. It
closed for post office business on October 27, 2006, and immediately
moved into GSA’s surplusing process.
|