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This one-story buff brick post office is organized with a tall central block with chamfered corners and recessed lower wings. The prominent hipped roof of the main block is a later addition. Window and door openings have no trim or accented frames, and the only hint of “style” is the segmental arch over the front door and the spread-winged eagle mounted on the door’s transom. Only proportion and crisp details convey the New Deal modernism. The post office contains the mural Texas Rangers in Camp (1942) painted by Ward Lockwood. The Hamilton Herald Record reported at the time: “Every Hamiltonian and Every Texan who’s ever read a book, seen a movie, or listened to the tales their grandfathers told can appreciate ‘Texas Rangers in Camp.’”