Tag Archives: Westport Post Office

Sheila Murphy’s Magnificent Post Office

When the post office moves into its new Playhouse Square digs a few months from now, it will likely be without fanfare.

They’re downsizing, after all; you don’t cut a ribbon at some spare, utilitarian space.

It’s a far cry from 1936, when Westport’s shining “new” post office opened on (appropriately) the Post Road.

Sheila Murphy remembers that ceremony like it was yesterday.  She should:  She cut the ribbon.

Sheila Murphy

Sheila was back in town the other day.  She’s lived in Florida since graduating from Staples in 1948 — but she’s 82 years young, and still loves Westport.

Her roots are deep.  Her own mother Mary is a Staples grad — in fact, Sheila says, Mary helped develop the school lunch program, and came up with the name “Inklings” for the school newspaper.

Sheila’s father John commuted to New York City for his job as an accountant with American Standard.  He had 3 children, and when his wife got sick he needed a job closer to Westport.

John Murphy was active in Democratic politics — locally and nationally — and knew Postmaster General James Farley.  Soon, President Roosevelt appointed Murphy as Westport’s postmaster.

“It was a plum job,” Sheila says.

The job was even better because a new post office was about to be dedicated. The WPA project replaced what Sheila calls a “ratty building” across the street.

“It was the middle of the Depression,” she recalls.  “Things were bad.  Having the government build a new building was good.  Thank heaven for the WPA.”

So one day in 1936, 7-year-old Sheila stood on the broad steps of the “magnificent edifice” and cut the ceremonial ribbon.  Well, she tried to — the oversized scissors were too big, so her father the postmaster finished the job.

He had a lot to do besides pose for photos.  Mail was delivered twice a day back then.  Westporters — many of whom did not have telephones —  communicated with friends by mailing postcards back and forth, one delivery following the next.

The Westport Post Office today. Trees now obscure the front of the WPA-era building.

John lived only a couple of more years.  He died very young — as did his wife.  From age 9 on, Sheila was raised by her aunt.

Sheila remembers her Imperial Avenue home — near the intersection with Bridge Street — as a wonderful former onion barn.  There was sledding in winter, and playing on a nearby 10-acre estate.  Owner Rose O’Neill had already earned fame as the creator of the Kewpie doll.

In town, Sheila took dance lessons at what is now Toquet Hall.

Though she stayed in Florida after college, Sheila returned regularly to Westport — with her 3 sons.

Sheila Murphy outside the Postmaster's office. It probably looked the same when her father had the job.

On her most recent visit, she stopped by the post office she dedicated 75 years ago.

How did she feel when she heard the building has been sold — taking with it three-quarters of a century of Westport history?

“I felt bad,” she says.  “It still looks like a beautiful building.

“But it’s old,” she admits.  “Maybe it’s too expensive to renovate.”

The clerks — and postmaster — may move to Playhouse Square.  But one thing will never change, Sheila Murphy insists.

“It’s always been my post office.”

PO’d At The PO?

How can I put this without sounding NIMBY?

Well, actually NIMFY.  You know:  Not In My Front Yard.

I live in what longtime Westporters call “the condos behind Friendly’s” — past the far end of Playhouse Square.

Others know it as “the condos behind Derma Clinic.”  But that’s been closed for over 2 years too.

Soon, I may be living in “the condos behind the post office.”

Yikes.

The entrance to Playhouse Square.

I’m not one to complain about certain changes.  When I bought my place I knew  there was a possibility that Winslow Park — despite being designated as open space in perpetuity — might become something other than a dog run.  When there was talk the YMCA might move there — even though the park is right in my BY — I was not displeased.

But the post office in Playhouse Square –WTF?

Fortunately, I’m not the only Westporter who is concerned.  RTM member Dick Lowenstein — who lives in Green’s Farms, and has a perfectly good post office very close to his own BY — has been motivated enough to write letters.

Over a year ago — after the US Postal Service announced that, for economic reasons, it would sell the building it’s owned since construction in 1936 — he contacted the USPS vice president in North Windsor, CT.  Dick noted that a post office is “core” to a functional, vibrant and efficient downtown area.  Consistent with the Town Plan of Conservation and Development, he said that of the 3 possible sites for a new post office, only one — the current location (though smaller than its current size) — was acceptable.

Dick noted that patrons would not walk to a Playhouse Square post office from downtown, making the current parking situation — “already tight” — worse.

If the USPS sold the current building to a developer, who then subdivided and gave the Postal Service a 2,000-square foot long-term lease, Dick said, a historic building would be saved; downtown Westport would keep an “anchor service,” the USPS would get cash; the developer would have a long-term tenant, and Westport would get the property back on its tax roll.

Perhaps Dick’s letter got lost in the mail.  Maybe others — including several from First Selectman Gordon Joseloff — did too.

This winter, the USPS announced its intention to move into Playhouse Square.  It expects to occupy the end unit, formerly filled by Friendly’s and Derma Clinic.

Westport's new post office?

According to Joseph J. Mulvey, a USPS “real estate specialist,” the proposed buyer of the downtown post office building — not yet publicly identified — does not want the post office to remain there.

Mulvey added that Playhouse Square “meets our requirements, is available, and was offered in response to our search for space.”

He believes the property will provide Westport with “an efficient, modern facility that offers a safe working environment for our employees and a level of service expected by our customers.”

Except those who try to drive there.  And then leave.

As anyone who shops at Playhouse Square knows, the parking lot is always crowded.  Many cars belong to employees themselves.

With over a dozen retail establishments — including an organic food store, frame shop, jewelry store and spa — open spots are at a premium.

A typical day in Playhouse Square.

Entering and exiting is always a problem.  There is one narrow entry lane; cars leaving funnel into a tight space, often backing up and blocking vehicles coming from the “upper” lot.

The United States Postal Service is in an unenviable position.  It has a difficult mandate — deliver mail to every citizen, everywhere in the country, at a low cost — and is buffeted by competition ranging from Fed Ex and UPS to faxes and email.

The question is:  Will moving this post office to a less convenient location help or hurt the USPS?

Click “Comments” to share your thoughts.  Or write.  I’m at 301 Post Road East.  You know:  the condos behind the already crowded Playhouse Square shopping center.  Right past what may soon become the post office.

The Next Picture Show

The Post Office is looking to unload its downtown building.  The Town of Westport is interested in buying it.  No one knows what would go there, but First Selectman Gordon Joseloff is open to suggestions.

“06880” suggests a movie theater.

Westport nightlife died a while ago, of multiple causes.  But if it were a corpse, the death certificate would read:  “Complications from loss of movie theaters.”

The lines of the old Fine Arts Theater -- including the recessed entryway -- are still visible at Restoration Hardware.

Fine Arts I and II (now Restoration Hardware), III (now Matsu Sushi) and IV (now whatever is behind the Baskin-Robbins building) brought people downtown.

They had dinner before movies, and ice cream after.  They went to nearby bars.  They strolled and window-shopped, and if they saw something they liked, they returned when the stores were open to buy it.

The Post Office is not big enough for an Imax.  We don’t need a multiplex, like the comically named Bow-Tie Cinemas.

But wouldn’t a place that showed indie and art films be great?

Fairfield's Community Theater, where Westporters go for entertainment.

Westporters go to the Garden Cinemas in Norwalk all the time.  We’re big fans of Fairfield’s Community Theater.  There’s no reason those towns can have independent movie theaters, and we can’t.

A movie theater would re-invigorate downtown.  It would provide jobs, and stimulate the economy.  It would give teenagers a place to go, and something to do.

Come on, Mr. First Selectman.  Put your weight and prestige behind turning the Post Office into a movie theater.

It’s not like you don’t know the business.  Your grandfather opened the Fine Arts Theater, back in 1916.

Knowing the way Westport works, if we get started today we’d have opening night at the Post Office Theater just in time for that centennial.

Westport is not like Anarene, Texas after that town lost its movie theater. Right?