The 1869 City Hall Post Office and Court House was despised by New Yorkers for its flagrant, overbuilt aesthetic and nicknamed "Mullett's Monstrosity" after it's architect Alfred B. Mullett. As @boweryboysnyc write in their impressive new book Adventures of Old New York, "the post office looked even sadder with the arrival of the Woolworth Building across the street in 1913." When City Hall Park was expanded to the south in 1939, the post office was "finally stamped 'return to sender' and torn down." (Bowery Boys) We actually love the #SecondEmpire design of the post office, what do you think? Should it have been torn down? #SecondEmpireArchitecture (at City Hall (IRT Lexington Avenue Line))



















