Skip to main content

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

GSA Logo U.S. General Services Administration
    • Explore buy through us
    • Category management
    • Government property for sale or lease
      Toggle submenu
      • Personal property (tangible goods)
      • Real property (real estate and buildings) for public use
      • Real property sales
      • Vehicle sales
    • Products and services
      Toggle submenu
      • Human capital
      • Industrial products and services
      • Office management
      • Professional services
      • Security and protection
      • Transportation and logistics services
    • Purchasing programs
      Toggle submenu
      • Assisted acquisition
      • Commercial platforms
      • Federal strategic sourcing initiative
      • Fleet management
      • HCaTS and HCaTS SB
      • OASIS and OASIS SB
      • Requisition programs
      • State and local programs
      • Emergency acquisition basic ordering agreements
    • Shared services
      Toggle submenu
      • Payroll services
      • Support services for CABs

    Featured Topics

    • Multiple Award Schedule Governmentwide contracts for products and services at volume discount pricing.
    • Auctions Federal assets available via auction to the general public.
    • Explore sell to government
    • Step 1: Learn about government contracting
      Toggle submenu
      • Ways you can sell to government
      • How to access contract opportunities
      • Conduct market research
    • Step 2: Compete for a contract
      Toggle submenu
      • Register your business
      • Certify as a small business
      • Become a schedule holder
      • Market your business
      • Research active solicitations
      • Respond to a solicitation
      • What to expect during the award process
    • Step 3: Manage your contract
      Toggle submenu
      • Comply with contractual requirements
      • Handle contract modifications
      • Monitor past performance evaluations

    Featured Topics

    • Contract opportunities on SAM.gov Search current federal contract opportunities and procurement notices.
    • Forecast of contracting opportunities Anticipated contracts offered by GSA.
    • Vendor support center Research the federal market, report sales, and upload contract information.
    • Explore real estate
    • Design and construction
      Toggle submenu
      • 3D-4D building information modeling
      • Computer-aided design standards
      • Engineering
      • Project management information system
      • Prospectus thresholds
    • Facilities management
      Toggle submenu
      • Security
      • Tenant services
      • Water quality management
    • Our properties
      Toggle submenu
      • Owned and leased properties
      • Regional buildings
      • Renting property
    • Real estate services
      Toggle submenu
      • Leasing resources
      • Real property disposal
      • Reimbursable services (RWA)
      • For businesses seeking opportunities
      • For workers in federal buildings
      • Voice of the customer
    • Workplace optimization
      Toggle submenu
      • Commercial coworking
      • Federal coworking
      • Space Match
    • Explore historic buildings

    Featured Topics - Real Estate

    • Historic preservation tools and resources Procedures for maintaining and repairing historic buildings.
    • Real property disposal Dispose or acquire excess federal real property including buildings or land.
    • Explore policy and regulations
    • Acquisition management policy
    • Aviation management policy
    • Information technology policy
    • Real property management policy
    • Relocation management policy
    • Travel management policy
    • Vehicle management policy
    • Regulations
      Toggle submenu
      • Federal acquisition regulations
      • Federal management regulations
      • Federal travel regulations

    Featured Topics

    • Forms Search for a government form.
    • Per diem FAQs Frequently asked questions about per diem rates and related topics.
    • Explore small business
    • Small business goals
    • Register your business
      Toggle submenu
      • Explore business models
      • Research the federal market
      • Subcontracting and other partnerships
    • Forecast of contracting opportunities
    • Small business resources
      Toggle submenu
      • Small business contacts
      • Small business events
      • Videos

    Featured Topics

    • Forecast tool Information on planned federal contracting opportunities.
    • Socio economic categories Check your eligibility for small-business set-asides.
    • Training resources Suggested training for doing business with us.
    • Explore travel
    • Plan a trip
      Toggle submenu
      • Per diem rates
      • Transportation (airfare rates, POV rates, etc.)
      • Lodging
      • Travel charge card
    • Travel and lodging services
      Toggle submenu
      • E-gov travel service (ETS)
      • Rideshare
      • Travel category schedule
    • Federal travel regulation

    Featured Topics

    • Per diem rates look-up Allowances for lodging, meal and incidental costs while on official government travel.
    • Mileage reimbursement rates Reimbursement rates for the use of your own vehicle while on official government travel.
    • Explore technology
    • Build websites and digital services
    • Purchasing programs
      Toggle submenu
      • Cloud computing services
      • Cybersecurity products and services
      • Governmentwide acquisition contracts
      • MAS information technology
      • USAccess
    • Government initiatives
      Toggle submenu
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Cybersecurity
      • Emerging citizen technology
      • FedRAMP
      • Federal identity, credentials, and access management
      • Robotic process automation community
      • Technology modernization fund
    • Training

    Featured Topics

    • Challenge.gov Government sponsored challenges and prize competitions.
    • Data.gov Access U.S. government data.
    • Multiple award schedule IT category Information technology products, services and solutions.
    • Explore about us
    • Background and history
      Toggle submenu
      • Overview
      • Mission and strategic goals
      • Role in presidential transitions
    • Careers
      Toggle submenu
      • Get an internship
      • Launch your career
      • Elevate your professional career
      • Discover special hiring paths
      • Resources and related links
    • Events and training
      Toggle submenu
      • Events, training, and request a speaker
      • Our training programs
    • Newsroom
      Toggle submenu
      • Agency blog
      • Congressional testimony
      • GSA does that podcast
      • News releases
      • Speeches
      • Videos
    • Organization
      Toggle submenu
      • Leadership directory
      • Federal Acquisition Service
      • Public Buildings Service
      • Staff offices
    • Regions
      Toggle submenu
      • Region 1 | New England
      • Region 2 | Northeast and Caribbean
      • Region 3 | Mid-Atlantic
      • Region 4 | Southeast Sunbelt
      • Region 5 | Great Lakes
      • Region 6 | Heartland
      • Region 7 | Greater Southwest
      • Region 8 | Rocky Mountain
      • Region 9 | Pacific Rim
      • Region 10 | Northwest/Arctic
      • Region 11 | National Capital Region
    • Contact us

    Featured Topics

    • Blog Read the latest GSA news, updates and analysis.
    • Careers Learn what we have to offer.
  • Per diem lookup
Buy through us
Explore buy through us
Category management
Government property for sale or lease
Personal property (tangible goods)
Real property (real estate and buildings) for public use
Real property sales
Vehicle sales
Products and services
Human capital
Industrial products and services
Office management
Professional services
Security and protection
Transportation and logistics services
Purchasing programs
Assisted acquisition
Commercial platforms
Federal strategic sourcing initiative
Fleet management
HCaTS and HCaTS SB
OASIS and OASIS SB
Requisition programs
State and local programs
Emergency acquisition basic ordering agreements
Shared services
Payroll services
Support services for CABs
Sell to government
Explore sell to government
Step 1: Learn about government contracting
Ways you can sell to government
How to access contract opportunities
Conduct market research
Step 2: Compete for a contract
Register your business
Certify as a small business
Become a schedule holder
Market your business
Research active solicitations
Respond to a solicitation
What to expect during the award process
Step 3: Manage your contract
Comply with contractual requirements
Handle contract modifications
Monitor past performance evaluations
Real estate
Explore real estate
Design and construction
3D-4D building information modeling
Computer-aided design standards
Engineering
Project management information system
Prospectus thresholds
Facilities management
Security
Tenant services
Water quality management
Our properties
Owned and leased properties
Regional buildings
Renting property
Real estate services
Leasing resources
Real property disposal
Reimbursable services (RWA)
For businesses seeking opportunities
For workers in federal buildings
Voice of the customer
Workplace optimization
Commercial coworking
Federal coworking
Space Match
Explore historic buildings
Policy and regulations
Explore policy and regulations
Acquisition management policy
Aviation management policy
Information technology policy
Real property management policy
Relocation management policy
Travel management policy
Vehicle management policy
Regulations
Federal acquisition regulations
Federal management regulations
Federal travel regulations
Small business
Explore small business
Small business goals
Register your business
Explore business models
Research the federal market
Subcontracting and other partnerships
Forecast of contracting opportunities
Small business resources
Small business contacts
Small business events
Videos
Travel
Explore travel
Plan a trip
Per diem rates
Transportation (airfare rates, POV rates, etc.)
Lodging
Travel charge card
Travel and lodging services
E-gov travel service (ETS)
Rideshare
Travel category schedule
Federal travel regulation
Technology
Explore technology
Build websites and digital services
Purchasing programs
Cloud computing services
Cybersecurity products and services
Governmentwide acquisition contracts
MAS information technology
USAccess
Government initiatives
Artificial Intelligence
Cybersecurity
Emerging citizen technology
FedRAMP
Federal identity, credentials, and access management
Robotic process automation community
Technology modernization fund
Training
About us
Explore about us
Background and history
Overview
Mission and strategic goals
Role in presidential transitions
Careers
Get an internship
Launch your career
Elevate your professional career
Discover special hiring paths
Resources and related links
Events and training
Events, training, and request a speaker
Our training programs
Newsroom
Agency blog
Congressional testimony
GSA does that podcast
News releases
Speeches
Videos
Organization
Leadership directory
Federal Acquisition Service
Public Buildings Service
Staff offices
Regions
Region 1 | New England
Region 2 | Northeast and Caribbean
Region 3 | Mid-Atlantic
Region 4 | Southeast Sunbelt
Region 5 | Great Lakes
Region 6 | Heartland
Region 7 | Greater Southwest
Region 8 | Rocky Mountain
Region 9 | Pacific Rim
Region 10 | Northwest/Arctic
Region 11 | National Capital Region
Contact us
  1. Home
  2. Real estate
  3. Historic preservation
  4. Explore historic buildings
  5. Find a Building
  6. U.S. Post Office and Courthouse, Camden, NJ

U.S. Post Office and Courthouse, Camden, NJ

Location: 401 Market St, Camden, NJ 08102

History

U.S. Post Office and Courthouse, Camden, NJ

William Royden and William Cooper, both arriving in 1681, were among the first known settlers of what would become Camden, New Jersey. Through the 1780s, the town was called Cooper’s Ferry for the ferry service Cooper provided to Philadelphia, located directly across the Delaware River from Camden. In 1834, the Camden & Amboy railroad, then the longest railroad in the country, had a terminus in Camden; later that century Camden became a significant industrial hub for the northeast. In 1926, President Coolidge dedicated the Benjamin Franklin Bridge between Camden and Philadelphia, fostering a population increase in Camden.

By the mid-1920s, Camden had outgrown its first federally owned post office, which had been constructed in 1900 at Third and Arch streets. For the replacement building, obtaining a federal appropriation in February 1928 marked a major milestone, but not the end, of the multi-year effort preceding its actual construction. Congressional representatives Charles A. Wolverton and F. F. Patterson pressed the case in Congress, joined in lobbying by the Camden Chamber of Commerce. A two-year period was required for the land acquisition, demolition, and the site assemblage process.

Completed in 1932, the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse represents an important example of 1930s Neoclassical federal architecture in the Modernist manner. A cornerstone near the entry indicates this building was completed under James A. Wetmore, who served as acting supervising architect of the U.S. Treasury from 1915 to 1933. The design itself was likely overseen by Louis A. Simon, an MIT-trained architect who served as superintendent of the architectural division under Wetmore and designed hundreds of significant federal buildings across the country. In addition to the post office and the federal courts, the original tenants in the newly opened building included the U.S. District Attorneys, U.S. Marshals Service, Prohibition Service, U.S. Army Reserve, Internal Revenue Service, and Labor Department.

Completed in 1994, a six-story courthouse annex named in honor of federal Judge Mitchell H. Cohen intersects the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse via a second-floor linkway. Its architectural treatment is sympathetic to the 1932 building.

Architecture

Completed in October 1932, the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse in Camden, New Jersey, was immediately noticeable in its setting at the northeast corner of Market and Fourth streets due to its limestone and buff brick colored exterior. This treatment differentiates it from the other dark-colored brick and brownstone buildings comprising the local and state designated Market Street Historic District. The six-story Mitchell H. Cohen U.S. Courthouse Annex (Oliver & Becica, Architects; 1994) adjoins directly north, linked physically to the 1932 building at the second floor level, and aesthetically, through means of its simulated limestone concrete with granite accents.

In contrast to the social and political upheaval that characterized the Great Depression years in Camden and New Jersey’s other large cities, the federal building and courthouse expresses the relative continuity of tradition seen in New Jersey’s public architecture, and the preeminent place of the Neoclassical style-in this case, an updated version of this style in the Modernist manner. The symmetry associated with earlier forms of Classical Revival, such as the main entrance’s grouping of three doorways and their centered placement on the Market Street facade, is retained here. The classical architectural vocabulary also is retained, but now simplified, abstracted, or suggested in a Modernist manner while still pointing to Neoclassical architectural tradition. Capitals at the fourth floor level suggest pilasters below, and the taut handling of the wall surfaces at the first floor level hint at the rough stonework of Renaissance- era buildings. Complementing these Neoclassical features are Spanish Revival elements, such as the interior’s multi-colored quarry tile wainscot and floor tile treatment. The original mission tile roof also conveyed this theme. Art Deco elements present in the elaborate entrance doors, transom windows, and metal grille work express significant design trends of the early 1930s.

On the exterior, low-relief terracotta decoration enlivens each elevation, incorporating a surprising yet subtle variety of differing decorative elements, including Greek Fret, chalice, escutcheon, rosette and other patterning. These terracotta features include the belt course separating the first and second floor; pilaster capitals; spandrel panels between windows; as well as the roofline’s cornice, bed molding and frieze elements. Certain of the center window bays at upper floor levels incorporate colorful terracotta window spandrel panels. The spandrel panels are blue in color and decorated with stylized sailing ships of earlier centuries drawn from the history of European colonization of North America.

On the interior, tile is again a distinctive character-defining element. The first-floor public lobby features red fire-flashed, jade green, and gray-blue tile that form a striking basket weave flooring pattern. In combination with the flooring, the lobby’s American Pavanazzo marble wainscot paneling and Verde Antique marble base moldings, paneled plaster walls, and beamed ceilings and their stenciled decoration, together create a feeling of restrained elegance.

The third floor ceremonial courtroom contains one of the building’s most notable interiors, featuring oak flooring and wainscot paneling, a stenciled beamed ceiling, and chandeliers with plaster bowls containing classically inspired designs. As a dignified focal point to the courtroom, a nearly ceiling-height, semicircular-headed marble panel with a filigreed bronze overlay marks the center of the wall behind the judge’s bench and dais.

Beginning in the early 1960s, office floors have undergone remodeling and modernization. However, interior public spaces including the lobby and the ceremonial courtroom retain very good integrity.

History

  • 1928: U.S. Congress appropriates $1.5 million for land acquisition and building construction
  • 1931: Groundbreaking on May 22
  • 1932: Building completed and opened to the public on October 29
  • Early 1990s: Major renovation work on fourth and fifth floors
  • 1994: Completion of the six-story Mitchell H. Cohen courthouse annex
  • 1999: GSA undertakes restoration and the selective recreation of decorative stenciling and toned metallic ornamentation in the courtroom and lobby

Facts

  • Architect: James A. Wetmore
  • Architectural Style: Neoclassical
  • Construction Dates: 1931-1932
  • GSA Building Number: NJ0015ZZ
  • Landmark Status: Listed in the National Register of Historic Places
  • Primary Materials: Limestone, granite, brick
  • Prominent Features: Decorative and colorful terracotta detailing; Spanish Colonial interior ornamentation; Ceremonial courtroom with oak wainscot paneling

Poster Download

U.S. Post Office and Courthouse, Camden, New Jersey

 

Download the poster [PDF - 362 KB]

 

Print Page Email Page
Last updated: Jan 30, 2025
Top

Home

  • Resources for …
    • Americans with Disabilities
    • Citizens and Consumers
    • Federal Employees
    • GSA Employees
    • Native American affairs
    • Presidential & Congressional Commissions, Boards or Small Agencies
    • Small Business
  • Governmentwide Initiatives
    • Centers of Excellence
    • Digital experience
    • Emergency response
    • Federal Cybersecurity
    • ID, Credentials, and Access Management
    • Information Quality
    • Open Data
    • Technology Modernization Fund
  • Contact Us
  • Organization
    • Leadership Directory
    • Staff Directory
  • References
    • Annual reports
    • Plain Language
    • Budget and Performance
    • Catalogs
    • Orders & Directives
    • Forms
  • Website Information
    • A-Z Index
    • Report a website issue
    • Sitemap
  • Also of Interest
    • Data.gov
    • Whitehouse.gov
  • Tools
    • eBuy
    • eLibrary
    • Contracting forecast tool
    • GSA Advantage
    • GSA Auctions
GSA logo
  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • instagram
  • Blog
  • email

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

GSA.gov

An official website of the U.S. General Services Administration

  • Accessibility statement
  • Website Policies
  • Reports
  • Office of the Inspector General
  • No FEAR Act
  • FOIA Requests
  • Board of Contract Appeals
Looking for U.S. government information and services?
Visit USA.gov

PER DIEM LOOK-UP

1 Choose a location

Error, The Per Diem API is not responding. Please try again later.

No results could be found for the location you've entered.

Get my location

OR

OR

Rates for Alaska, Hawaii, and U.S. territories and possessions are set by the Department of Defense.

Rates for foreign countries are set by the Department of State.

2 Choose a date


OR

Rates are available between 10/1/2022 and 09/30/2025.

The End Date of your trip can not occur before the Start Date.

 
 
Additional terms and conditions

Traveler reimbursement is based on the location of the work activities and not the accommodations, unless lodging is not available at the work activity, then the agency may authorize the rate where lodging is obtained.

Unless otherwise specified, the per diem locality is defined as "all locations within, or entirely surrounded by, the corporate limits of the key city, including independent entities located within those boundaries."

Per diem localities with county definitions shall include"all locations within, or entirely surrounded by, the corporate limits of the key city as well as the boundaries of the listed counties, including independent entities located within the boundaries of the key city and the listed counties (unless otherwise listed separately)."

When a military installation or Government - related facility(whether or not specifically named) is located partially within more than one city or county boundary, the applicable per diem rate for the entire installation or facility is the higher of the rates which apply to the cities and / or counties, even though part(s) of such activities may be located outside the defined per diem locality.