|
Custom
House and Post Office Washington DC
Location: 1221 31st St., NW, Washington, DC
The building that houses the Custom House and Post Office
of Georgetown was designed by Ammi B. Young, the Supervising Architect of the Treasury
from 1852 to 1862. The Custom House and Post Office is one of a number of buildings
that Young designed for the Treasury Department.
A world leader who sought peace and was the Founder of
the League of Nations, which became the foundation for the United Nations. A man
who used the power of his office to bring
about positive domestic reform and led
the nation through the First World War with determined and principled leadership.
His last home is for us today, as it was when he lived here removed from power and
once again a private citizen, a
place for the intimate reflection on his life as
educator, president and world statesman.
Georgetown was established as a port of entry to the United
States by an act of Congress approved March 22, 1779.
By 1856 the problem arose
of where to build a permanent custom house for the District. Congress appropriated
money to build a Custom House in Georgetown. Completed in 1858, the building housed
a post office on its first floor and custom house and Georgetown city offices on
its second floor. The basement was used for storage of goods awaiting inspection.
In 1864 Senate Bill #210 was introduced, proposing the abolishment of Georgetown
as the port of entry and making the official port Washington City. The mayor of
Georgetown led a violent fight against the bill, charging that Congress was attempting
to destroy his city. He convinced Congress, but when Georgetown was absorbed into the District of Columbia, the name of the port was officially changed to Washington.
In 1967, the Custom House moved out of its second floor space. The post office still
occupies the first floor.
|
|
|