United States Post Office (Cordele, Georgia)

The U.S. Post Office in Cordele, Georgia is a historic building built during 1912–13.

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 29, 1984.

James Knox Taylor is credited as the building's architect and its architectural design is considered Renaissance Revival architecture.

[1] Its NRHP nomination deemed it to be "a fine example of Taylor's efforts to provide the smaller communities with buildings that embodied the style of the Renaissance Revival" and compared it to The Louvre, Saint Paul's Cathedral, the banqueting house of Whitehall, and the Petit Trianon of Versailles.

This article about a property in Georgia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.