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United States Post Office and Courthouse (Baltimore, Maryland)

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Built
  
1930

Opened
  
1930

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Architect
  
James A. Wet

NRHP Reference #
  
77001530

Area
  
5,300 m²

Added to NRHP
  
25 March 1977

United States Post Office and Courthouse (Baltimore, Maryland)

Location
  
111 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Maryland

Similar
  
Royal Farms Arena, National Great Blacks In, Homewood Museum, Balti Convention Center, Lloyd Street Synagogue

The United States Post Office and Courthouse is a historic combined post office and Federal courthouse located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It occupies an entire city block and measures 238 feet, 2 inches east-west by 279 feet, 10 inches north-south. It is of steel frame construction with concrete floors and tile roof, basement of granite, and outer walls of white Indiana limestone. The structure is six stories in height and provided with basement and two sub-basements. It was completed in 1932 under the supervision of architect James A. Wetmore, and features classical ornamentation. Some notable court cases held in this building include:

  • 1934: Judge W. Calvin Chesnut became the first jurist to strike down a New Deal Act of Congress.
  • 1948: Alger Hiss filed a libel suit against Whittaker Chambers
  • 1968 and 1969: the Berrigans were indicted in this courthouse for destroying Federal records as a protest against the Vietnam War.
  • 1973: Vice President Spiro T. Agnew pleaded nolo contedre to tax evasion and resigned as Vice President.
  • 2009: Mayor Sheila Dixon was tried for 12 counts including perjury, theft and misconduct. She was convicted of fraudulent misappropriation and eventually resigned as mayor as part of a plea bargain in the Sheila Dixon trial.
  • The U.S. Post Office and Courthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. It has since been conveyed to the City of Baltimore, and is in use by the Baltimore city courts and known as Courthouse East.

    References

    United States Post Office and Courthouse (Baltimore, Maryland) Wikipedia