United States Customshouse (Barnstable, Massachusetts)

The U.S. Customshouse (now known as the Coast Guard Heritage Museum and the Donald G. Trayser Memorial Museum) is a historic customs house and United States Coast Guard museum on Cobbs Hill at 3353 Main Street (Massachusetts Route 6A) in Barnstable, Massachusetts. Built in 1855 to a design by Ammi Young, it was used as a custom house and post office until 1913, continuing to house the post office and other offices until 1958. It was converted into a museum in 1960, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[1]

U.S. Customshouse
US Customshouse in 2014
LocationBarnstable, Massachusetts
Coordinates41°42′1″N 70°17′57″W
Built1855
ArchitectAmmi B. Young
Architectural styleItalianate, other
Part ofOld King's Highway Historic District (ID87000314)
NRHP reference No.75000239[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPNovember 12, 1975
Designated CPMarch 12, 1987

Description and history

The former customshouse is set on the south side of Main Street just east of Barnstable's municipal complex. It is a two-story brick building with late Italianate styling, designed by Ammi Young and built in 1855. It has trim details of cast metal and a truncated hip roof. The building is nearly square, three bays on a side, with the front-facing bays projecting slightly. Its door and window openings have round-arch tops highlighted by light-colored trim. A line of corbeled brickwork separates the two floors, and there is more elaborate corbelling at the cornice. A carriage house with similar styling stands to the rear.[2]

The port of Barnstable was one of the busiest in Massachusetts in the 19th century. Prior to the construction of this facility, the customs collector of the U.S. Customs District of Barnstable operated from his own home. This building at first house the post office on the ground floor and the offices of the customs collector on the second floor, serving both of these roles until 1913. The upstairs offices next housed offices of the Barnstable County Extension Service. The post office moved out in 1958, and the federal government turned the building over to the town in 1960.[2] It has served as a museum property since, currently housing the Coast Guard Museum. The Old Jail (1690) is located on the museum grounds adjacent to the customshouse after being moved from another location nearby. There is also a working blacksmith shop with daily demonstrations on the museum grounds.

gollark: Which could all be done in Software.
gollark: As far as I can see, all a "SIM card" really needs is some sort of network-ID information, and then an asymmetric keypair to verify itself to a network and act as a user ID.
gollark: I mean, the old model of SIM cards doing a lot made sense in the worse old days when phones were underpowered, but now?
gollark: ... whyyyyyy
gollark: So apparently, because this is insane, eSIMs are physical SIM cards in the device which can be remotely changed?!

See also

References

Media related to United States Customshouse (Barnstable, Massachusetts) at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.