Skip to main content
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Study for Hyde Park Post Office Mural
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.

Study for Hyde Park Post Office Mural

Artifact IDMO 1968.15.88
Object Type Sketch
Artist (American painter and printmaker, 1904-1981)
Date1940
Mediumwatercolor on paper
Dimensionsframe H 16 5/8 in x W 20 5/8 in x D 1 in (42.2 cm x 52.4 cm x 2.5 cm )

Physical DescriptionA watercolor study for a mural panel for the post office in Hyde Park, New York. It depicts a view of the Hyde Park hills near the Quaker Meeting House (identified by the artist on the back of the mat). The white Meeting House is visible in the left background, and the roof of another building (mostly obscured by a hill) is seen in front of it. The painting is signed and dated by the artist in the lower right: Olin Dows 40.

The painting is matted, glazed, and framed in a 1/2" silver-painted wood frame. A label on the reverse of the frame indicates it was framed by Arax in Poughkeepsie, New York.
Historical NoteOne of the important artistic initiatives of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal were the WPA and Treasury Department programs to create large murals in public buildings.

These initiatives led to the creation of thousands of murals by local artists that still grace courthouses, post offices, city halls, schools, and other public structures in towns and cities from Maine to California. Many of these murals celebrated the history, culture, and people of their communities.

FDR took a strong interest in the murals created for public buildings in his native Dutchess County— especially the Hyde Park Post Office. He became deeply involved in the work of Olin Dows, the local artist who was commissioned to create those murals.

Dows built a scale model of the Post Office’s lobby so Roosevelt could see precisely how the murals would appear in the space. The artist became a friend of FDR’s and later gave the Roosevelt Library hundreds of sketches, drawings, and watercolor studies he produced - including this watercolor study - while creating the Hyde Park murals.

You can see Dows’s murals today if you visit the lobby of the Hyde Park Post Office. It is located on the Albany Post Road, two miles north of the Roosevelt Library.
Additional Details
Custodial History NotePresented to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum by Olin Dows on October 2, 1967.
Credit LineGift of Olin Dows
Use Restriction StatusUnrestrictedCopyrightReproduction or other use of these holdings or images thereof is unrestricted.
In Collection(s)
Not on view