Post Office - 1937 - Salmon Arm, BC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 50° 42.045 W 119° 17.047
11U E 338704 N 5619036
Built in 1937, this brick and stone building served as the Salmon Arm Post Office until 1974, then as the town library, and finally as an Art Gallery.
Waymark Code: WMQC55
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Date Posted: 02/02/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 2

A brass plaque has been mounted on the old post office, as well as other buildings in the town, by the Salmon Arm Branch of the Okanagan Historical Society, in commemoration of the Centennial of Salmon Arm. It can be found at the main entrance, just to the right of the doors.

Though the contract for the Salmon Arm Post Office was awarded in 1935, the post office was not ready for use until 1937 as the result of numerous delays. Given the time of its construction, this was most probably one of the "Make Work" projects undertaken by the Federal Government at the time, similar to the WPA and PWA projects under construction simultaneously south of the border.

Built at what could be termed Government Corner, the post office, likely built from Enderby brick, is adjacent to the courthouse and the city hall on Hudson Street. This post office was designed by architect Thomas W. Fuller, son of Thomas Fuller, then Chief Architect of the Dominion of Canada, the designer of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. Following in his father's footsteps, Thomas became Chief Architect in 1927 and remained in the position until 1937.

In 1974 the post office was moved to a new building and this building became the Salmon Arm Branch of the Okanagan Regional Library. It remained so until the library was moved to a new building and in 1994 was taken over by the Shuswap Art Gallery Association and the Shuswap District Arts Council, serving as an Arts Centre and Public Art Gallery. It continues in that capacity today.

Federal Post Office
Completed 1937

Constructed by William Reader
for $25,000, the building served
its original purpose until 1974
when it became the district library.

Since 1994 it has been an
Arts Centre and Public Art Gallery.

Salmon Arm Branch
Okanagan Historical Society
in observance
of Salmon Arm's Centennial

2005

From the plaque at the building

Post Office

DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Post Office is a one-storey flat-roofed brick building with a parapet, located within the grouping of three institutional buildings - the Municipal Hall, Court House and Post Office - on Hudson Street in downtown Salmon Arm, British Columbia.

HERITAGE VALUE
The Post Office is historically significant as an indication of the presence of the federal government in the (then) Village of Salmon Arm, and because it marks the community attaining the social and economic status it had sought for 50 years since the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1885. Although the contract for construction was awarded in 1935, the project was plagued with delays and opened without fanfare in 1937. The building has adapted to the growing city over the years, with a 1948 lobby renovation to accommodate an additional 224 postal boxes. After the Post Office function was moved to a new location in 1974, the building continued to function as a valued social and cultural landmark in the historic hub. It was the location of the Okanagan Regional Library for almost twenty years, and currently houses the Shuswap Art Gallery Association and the Shuswap District Arts Council offices.

The building is important for its design by architect Thomas W. Fuller, son of Thomas Fuller, Chief Architect of the Dominion of Canada, who designed the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. Following in his father's footsteps, T.W. Fuller was employed by the federal Department of Public Works in Ottawa, designing many notable public buildings throughout Canada. He filled the position of Chief Architect from 1927 to 1937.

The Post Office, together with the Court House and Municipal Hall, have historical value through their connection as three institutions representing three levels of government in close proximity to one another. As a group, the formal relationship of the buildings to one another, at the intersection of Hudson Street and Shuswap Avenue in the core of the downtown, is important for its representation of a civic precinct of buildings with related historical and current uses.

Also important is the asymmetrical siting of the building in the southwest corner of the Agnes McGuire property. The front of the building faces southwest at the corner of Hudson Avenue and McLeod Street (created in the first city survey in 1906) in an area of the city where earlier streets (parallel or perpendicular with the lakeshore and railway tracks) meet the later survey grid.

Built by local contractor William Reader, the building is important aesthetically for its rendition of a classic post office form in local materials, possibly built from Enderby brick. The presence of the basement reflects the needs of a postal operation, while the square massing, flat roof, parapet and raised entry are Art Deco influenced and have a restrained design typical of small-town federal government postal structures in the 1930s.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS

Site:
- location in an enclave on Hudson Avenue in downtown Salmon Arm
- asymmetrical siting with the front door facing the intersection of Hudson Avenue and McLeod Street

Building:
- square floor plan and cubic massing
- Art Deco characteristics such as flat roof with raised stepped brick parapet and horizontal band detail
- brick building material
- arched wood windows
- front door above grade with entry stairs
From Historic Places Canada

Subject: Town

Commemoration: Centennial

Date of Founding: 1905

Date of Commemoration: 2005

Address:
70 Hudson Avenue N.E. Salmon Arm, British Columbia V1E 4H7


Overview Photograph:

Yes


Detail Photograph:

Yes


Web site if available: [Web Link]

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