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[Johnson City Post Office]

Description: Photograph of the Johnson City Post Office located in Johnson City, Texas. The close photo shows the double doors, tiled floors, and outdoor lights of the building. A plaque bearing the building's name and ZIP code is affixed to the wall on the right.
Date: unknown
Creator: Dietel, Norman
Partner: LBJ Museum of San Marcos

[Old Juarez Post Office]

Description: Photograph of the Old Juarez Post Office. The old Juarez post office is the building immediately to the left hand side of this photograph. The building had endured severe damage due to the bullets and cannon shells that hit the post office during the Battle of Juarez. At the very end of this unpaved dirt street is the tower of the Customs House in downtown Ciudad Juarez. Between the post office and Customs House there is another building, also on the left hand side, that is clearly identifi… more
Date: [1910..1920]
Creator: Aultman, Otis A., 1874-1943
Partner: El Paso Public Library

[Lyndon Johnson Shaking Hands under a Post Office Display]

Description: Photograph of Lyndon Johnson smiling at the camera while shaking hands with a bald and portly man to the left. They are standing in front of a display for the Dallas, Texas, region of the United States Post Office. Pictures and plans for the post office adorn the display. The Post Office seal is above the bald man's head and to the right of a display for the U. S. Marines.
Date: unknown
Creator: Dietel, Norman
Partner: LBJ Museum of San Marcos

[Interior View of United States Post Office]

Description: Photograph of an interior view of a United States Post Office in Mobeetie, Texas. Two women and two men are holding mail and standing in a line. In the center of the room, there is a table with two canvas bags hanging from it. Post Office boxes filled with mail line all three of the visible walls.
Date: unknown
Creator: Born, Julius
Partner: River Valley Pioneer Museum

Beeville Post Office

Description: In 1857, Michael Seeligson was the first postmaster at Beeville-on the Medio (originally Medio Hill in Goliad County), five miles northeast of the present town of Beeville. In the new county seat after 1889, the Beeville Post Office was moved several times. Opened on June 5, 1918, the present neoclassical building was built under Secretary of the Treasury William G. McAdoo, with Supervising Architect James A. Wetmore. During construction, on May 7, 1917, contractor Robert B. Brown shot and k… more
Date: 1918
Partner: Bee County Historical Commission
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