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The United States Court House and Post Office in Austin Texas in 1901. Architect James G. Hill designed the building, and it was constructed partially under the supervision of architect Abner Cook. The courthouse was completed in 1879 at a cost of $200,000. The United States District Court for the Western District of Texas met there from then ...
U.S. Court House & Post Office † Jefferson: 223 West Austin: E.D. Tex. 1890–1961 Now the Jefferson Historical Society Museum. n/a U.S. Post Office, Courthouse and Custom House† Laredo: 1300 Matamoros Street: S.D. Tex. 1907–2004 Still in use as a post office. n/a George P. Kazen Federal Building and United States Courthouse: Laredo: 1300 ...
US Post Office and Federal Building (Port Arthur, Texas), Port Arthur, TX, listed on the NRHP in Texas; Post Office and Federal Building (San Antonio, Texas), included in the Alamo Plaza Historic District; Old Federal Building and Post Office (Victoria, Texas), listed on the NRHP in Texas; U.S. Post Office – Downtown Tacoma, also known as "U ...
Old Federal Building and Post Office (Victoria, Texas), NRHP-listed in Victoria County; Sam B. Hall, Jr. Federal Building and United States Courthouse, Marshall, Texas, NRHP-listed; U.S. Post Office and Federal Building (Austin, Texas), NRHP-listed; US Post Office and Federal Building (Port Arthur, Texas), NRHP-listed in Jefferson County
The surrounding areas have Austin mailing addresses. From 1888 to 2024, the Austin White Lime Company operated a limestone quarry and a plant for the production of lime products. The final day of operation was March 31st, 2024. [3] Although McNeil is unincorporated, it has a post office with the ZIP code of 78651. [4]
The J.J. Pickle Federal Building is one of the largest mid-century modern buildings in Texas and has a rich political history. The eleven-story structure is a quintessential specimen of mid-century high-rises with its vertically oriented, uniform exterior grid that "reflects a golden age for civic architecture in the 1950s and 1960s". [1]