Mail Delivery (East - Eastern Mailman - One of Four) - Philadelphia, PA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
N 39° 57.058 W 075° 09.317
18S E 486735 N 4422326
Very nice relief sculpture on the left side of this Post Office/Federal Building in Old City Philadelphia. The relief was created as part of the Works Progress Administration in the early forties.
Waymark Code: WMCHP9
Location: Pennsylvania, United States
Date Posted: 09/09/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Pensive Travellers
Views: 3

The relief was sculpted by Edmond Amateis as part of the Roosevelt's WPA initiative in 1935. The first one of these was created in 1937 when Amateis created Mail Delivery North, one of the four bas-relief sculptures on the Robert N.C. Nix Federal Building. Amateis has made reliefs all over the country and they are very recognizable and bear his tell-tale artistic signature or relief flare that only he produced. For the record, Edmond Romulus Amateis (27 February 1897; Rome, Italy – 1 May 1981; Clermont, Florida) was an American sculptor and educator. He is known for garden-figure sculptures, colossal architectural sculptures for public buildings and portrait busts.

The SIRIS site describes this sculpture as: One of four reliefs flanking the main entrance to the post office on 9th Street. The reliefs symbolize the tireless efforts of postal workers who deliver the mail in the various outer reaches of America. Representing the Eastern United States is a mailman dressed in a traditional postal uniform of the 1940s consisting of a double-breasted jacket and small round cap. In front of him is the bumper of a 1940s car and a mailbox attached to a fluted column. With his proper right hand, he reaches into a mailbox to collect the mail. He carries a mail pouch slung over his proper left shoulder and rests his proper left hand on the strap. Behind him is another fluted column.

The relief is made of granite. Its dimensions are approximately 108 inches in height and 120 inches in width. The artists name is inscribed in the lower right side. I think it is his signature. The relief is viewable from the sidewalk along south ninth street. It is located to the right of the side entrance. There is another one of thee to the left. I parked along the street. The front of the building is along Market Street. The Robert N. C. Nix, Sr. Federal Building and Post Office is located at the southwest corner of Ninth and Market Streets in downtown Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The Nix building was constructed between 1937-1939 as a project of the Public Works Administration, a federal initiative to provide jobs and economic activity surrounding public construction projects as part of the nation’s recovery from the Great Depression.

The Nix building is a stylized Moderne structure built out of Indiana Limestone, with simplified classical design elements. The entrances to the Court House, on Market and Chestnut, are flanked by huge bas-relief granite sculptures depicting allegories of justice and the rule of law. My favorites, however, are the bas-relief sculptures along 9th Street showing postal carriers in different parts of the United States. SOURCE

Your impression of the sculpture?:

Date Sculpture was opened for vewing?: 01/01/1941

Website for sculpture?: [Web Link]

Where is this sculpture?:
United States Post Office and Court House
William Penn Annex, 9th & Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, PA USA
19107


Sculptors Name: Edmond Amateis

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