- Clinton Federal Building: Crimi Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts: 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions). Alfred D. Crimi painted two large (7' x 13.5') frescoes for the Post Office building in 1937: "Transportation of Mail" and "Post Office Work Room". They are located on the 4th floor of the south wing of the building. Sarah Gordon notes that: "Crimi, an experienced fresco painter who trained in...
- Clinton Federal Building: Kent Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts – 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions) – featuring postal themes. Rockwell Kent painted two large (7' x 13.5') murals for the Post Office building: "Mail Service in the Tropics" and "Mail Service in the Arctic" (1937). At the time, Alaska and Puerto Rico represented the northernmost and southernmost territories serviced by the U.S. Post Office...
- Clinton Federal Building: Lockwood Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts – 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions) – featuring postal themes. Ward Lockwood painted two large (6' x 13.5') murals for the former Post Office Building: "Opening of the Southwest" and "Consolidation of the West" (1937). These reflect conventional American thinking in the 1930s about the conquest of the west as a peaceful process of...
- Clinton Federal Building: Palmer Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts – 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions) – featuring postal themes. William C. Palmer painted two large (7' x 13.5') murals for the Post Office Building: "Covered Wagon Attacked by Indians" and "Mail Coach Attacked by Bandits" (1937). It must be said that Palmer's idea of the Wild West was standard popular mythology and the...
- Clinton Federal Building: Savage Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts – 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions) – featuring postal themes. Eugene Francis Savage painted two large (7 x 13.5') murals for the Post Office Department building: "Carrier of News and Knowledge" and "Messenger of Sympathy and Love". The works were painted in 1937. Sarah Gordon says of these murals: "As the culmination of the U.S. Post...
- Clinton Federal Building: Mechau Murals - Washington DCThe Clinton Federal Building (north) was originally the US Post Office Department headquarters, completed under the New Deal in 1934. It contains a wealth of New Deal artworks commissioned and paid for by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts – 25 murals and 22 sculptural elements (12 bas-reliefs, 2 statues, 8 wood medallions) – featuring postal themes. In 1937, Frank Mechau painted two large (7 x 13') oil-on-canvas murals for the former Post Office Department Building: "Dangers of the Mail" and "Pony Express." They are notable both for their stylistic daring and their controversial subject matter, and they have evoked praise...
- Spring Mill State Park: Spring Mill Lake - Mitchell INThe CCC laborers completed the Spring Mill Lake in 1937. The CCC workers also built a dam. The dam has remained in use and is unaltered.
- Pokagon State Park: Office Building - Angola INAround 1937, CCC workers completed a 2½ story service building, which today houses park offices. It is not in a public area.
- Pokagon State Park: CCC Pocket Museum - Angola INThe former gatehouse at the entrance to Pokagon State Park was completed by Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) enrollees in 1937 and used until the mid-1980s. The style of the former gatehouse is classified as Park Rustic. Using a variety of native materials, the CCC built gatehouses designed to appeal to the eye and draw in visitors with hints of the delights of nature within the park. In 2016, the little building was dedicated as a CCC Pocket Museum, featurng exhibits about the CCC's work in the park and beyond. There is also a permanent exhibit in the Nature Center (not a CCC building)...
- Post Office Mural - Tipton INThe historic Tipton post office houses an example of New Deal artwork: "Indiana Farming," a Section of Fine Arts post office mural completed by Donald M. Mattison in 1937. The size of the mural is 12' x 7' and the medium is oil on canvas.