Filed Under Bozeman

Federal Building and Post Office, Bozeman

Main Street Historic District

Cattle baron, banker, and entrepreneur Nelson Story purchased this site in 1870 for $154. In June 1911 the United States Secretary of the Treasury took the land from Nelson Story Jr. and his family citing that public use required taking and holding the property. The Storys received $7,500 in compensation and the right to move their dwelling off the site. In 1912, the U.S. government began construction of Bozeman’s first federal building. Completed in 1915, the Neoclassical style facility served as the post office until 1964. In 1999, the Human Resource Development Council renovated the building as a Community Services Center. Interior work restored the walk-in vaults, the postmaster’s hidden catwalks for monitoring postal workers, and a grand oak stairway. Original exterior features include the sandstone parapet cap and cornice molding, decorative columns beneath the two monumental arched windows, and cast-iron light posts flanking the entry. This solid, impressive structure has long been a focal point of Bozeman’s historical streetscape and recently served as a backdrop in the movie, A River Runs Through It.

Images

Federal Building and Post Office
Federal Building and Post Office Federal Building and Post Office. Front to side view of the building, facing southwest on the corner of East Babcock Street and South Black Avenue near the front entry. Source: Montana State Historic Preservation Office Creator: S. Alan Higgins and Elizabeth Heavrin Date: Aug. 2016- May 2017
Federal Building and Post Office
Federal Building and Post Office Federal Building and Post Office. Rear to side view of the building, facing northwest from the employee lot to the south near South Black Avenue. Source: Montana State Historic Preservation Office Creator: S. Alan Higgins and Elizabeth Heavrin Date: Aug. 2016- May 2017

Location

10 East Babcock Avenue, Bozeman, Montana | Public

Metadata

The Montana National Register Sign Program, “Federal Building and Post Office, Bozeman,” Historic Montana, accessed April 24, 2024, https://historicmt.org/items/show/563.