Date added: December 23, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Elof Wedin painted this oil-on-canvas mural, entitled “Street Scene,” in 1937 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the Litchfield post office lobby.
Date added: December 19, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Seymour Fogel painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “People of the Soil,” in 1940 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the Cambridge post office lobby. “People of the Soil” is “a… read more
Date added: December 21, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
William E. L. Bunn painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Peony Festival at Hamburg,” in 1941 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. “The original mural was destroyed during renovations in the 70s. In 1999, Tony Rajer’s… read more
Date added: December 21, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Ross E. Braught painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Waynesboro Landscape,” in 1942 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the Waynesboro post office lobby.
Date added: December 17, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Stefan Hirsch painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Scenic and Historic Booneville,” in 1943, in what was then the Booneville post office, with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. The mural is viewable in the lobby.
Date added: December 18, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Joep Nicolas completed this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Coldwater Activities,” in 1942 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the lobby.
Date added: December 19, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
The Boundary County Courthouse is the site of three friezes, all created by Fletcher Martin in 1940 for the Works Progress Administration Federal Art Project (WPA-FAP) and viewable on the front of the courthouse. They are officially untitled but are known… read more
Date added: December 11, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Aaron Bohrod painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Breaking the Prairie–Log City, 1837,” in 1938 for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the Galesburg post office lobby. “Galesburg, IL was a planned community, established in… read more
Date added: December 11, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
William Pfohl painted this oil on canvas mural in 1940, entitled “Port of Wilmington,” with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the post office library.
Date added: December 11, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Edward Fern painted this oil on canvas mural in 1942, entitled “Kentucky Mountain Mail En Route,” for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the lobby of the Pineville post office.
Date added: December 16, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
John Sharp painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Hunters,” in 1942 with funds provided by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the Hawarden post office lobby. An Iowa native, Sharp was inspired by other local… read more
Date added: December 16, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Richard Zoellner painted this 6 1/4′ x 13′ oil on canvas mural, entitled “Tobacco Harvest,” in 1938 for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the lobby of the Georgetown post office. “Only a quarter of the… read more
Date added: December 15, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Gustaf Dahlstrom painted this oil on canvas mural, entitled “Illinois Farm,” in 1936, for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in the lobby of the Gillespie post office.
Date added: December 9, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
James Calder painted the oil-on-canvas mural “Waiting for the Mail” in 1938 for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. The mural hangs in the lobby of the historic Grand Lodge, Michigan post office.
Date added: December 9, 2014; Modified: January 18, 2015
Marvin Beerhom painted the oil-on-canvas mural “Belding Brothers and Their Silk Industry” in 1943 for the Treasury Section of Fine Arts. It is viewable in Belding’s library.