Auburn Post Office (City Hall)

The land on which this building is situated was owned by Judge John Harper, the founder of Auburn. In 1846, Harper deeded the land to Auburn Academy agent Simeon Porter for the purpose of building Auburn's first schools. The site served as the home of multiple educational facilities over the ne...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Evan Isaac, Joshua Shiver
Format: Electronic
Published: Auburn University Libraries
Subjects:
Online Access:https://omeka.lib.auburn.edu/items/show/143
format Electronic
collection Alabama Cultural Resource Survey Collection
building Auburn University
publisher Auburn University Libraries
topic Cultural resources
spellingShingle Cultural resources
Auburn Post Office (City Hall)
Evan Isaac, Joshua Shiver
fulltopic Cultural resources
Local Government; Post Office; Auburn, AL; John Harper; National Register of Historic Places; Education; Lee County, AL; Civil War; Simeon Porter
description The land on which this building is situated was owned by Judge John Harper, the founder of Auburn. In 1846, Harper deeded the land to Auburn Academy agent Simeon Porter for the purpose of building Auburn's first schools. The site served as the home of multiple educational facilities over the next 80 years including the Auburn Academy male division, East Alabama Male College Preparatory Department, the Auburn Female College, and the Auburn Grammar School. The Post Office was Auburn’s first public building and was destroyed by Federal cavalrymen during Rousseau’s Raid in July 1864. It was situated across College Avenue from where the University Chapel now stands. In 1931 the city donated the land to the federal government for the creation of a post office. Built in the 'starved classical' design, it was completed in 1933. It served as the city's post office until 1991. The city of Auburn purchased the property in 1992, renting it to the East Alabama Food Bank. After renovations it became Auburn City Hall in 2001. The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 as the 'Auburn Post Office.'
spelling Auburn Post Office (City Hall)Evan Isaac, Joshua ShiverLocal Government; Post Office; Auburn, AL; John Harper; National Register of Historic Places; Education; Lee County, AL; Civil War; Simeon PorterThe land on which this building is situated was owned by Judge John Harper, the founder of Auburn. In 1846, Harper deeded the land to Auburn Academy agent Simeon Porter for the purpose of building Auburn's first schools. The site served as the home of multiple educational facilities over the next 80 years including the Auburn Academy male division, East Alabama Male College Preparatory Department, the Auburn Female College, and the Auburn Grammar School. The Post Office was Auburn’s first public building and was destroyed by Federal cavalrymen during Rousseau’s Raid in July 1864. It was situated across College Avenue from where the University Chapel now stands. In 1931 the city donated the land to the federal government for the creation of a post office. Built in the 'starved classical' design, it was completed in 1933. It served as the city's post office until 1991. The city of Auburn purchased the property in 1992, renting it to the East Alabama Food Bank. After renovations it became Auburn City Hall in 2001. The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 as the 'Auburn Post Office.'Alabama Cultural Resource SurveyEvan Isaac2014-12-08Still Image and TextJPEG and Texthttps://omeka.lib.auburn.edu/items/show/143Image: Wikimedia, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d3/Post_office_Price_Utah.jpeg Text: Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_City_Hall Text: English
title Auburn Post Office (City Hall)
titleStr Auburn Post Office (City Hall)
author Evan Isaac, Joshua Shiver
author_facet Evan Isaac, Joshua Shiver
id AUcultural143
url https://omeka.lib.auburn.edu/items/show/143
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