Post office antique cabinet to return home

AMENIA — A sorting cabinet used in the South Amenia post office (long closed) is being returned to the town and will be displayed as a piece of Amenia’s past in its new Town Hall.According to Doug Kendall, the curator of collection for the New York State Historical Association (NYSHA), Milo Winchester, postmaster at the South Amenia post office for 62 years, loaned the association a mail-sorting cabinet used in the post office, back in 1942. The cabinet has been on display at the association’s museum in Cooperstown, as well as the nearby Farmers’ Museum (a sister institution for NYSHA) off and on for many years, but is currently not on display.According to the original agreement between Winchester and NYSHA, the cabinet became the association’s property when Winchester died in 1967. Because the cabinet is geographically outside NYSHA’s usual range of collections, the association has offered it back to the town of Amenia.Councilwoman Victoria Perotti said that for the past few months since Kendall contacted the town, she has been trying to arrange a meet-up, halfway between Cooperstown and Amenia, where the cabinet could be delivered. But poor weather and conflicting schedules have kept the historic artifact’s transfer of ownership in limbo, for the time being. Perotti said the cabinet would make its way to Town Hall soon.“We already have a group of benches on the first floor that [local historian] Ann Linden donated to us, so we’re looking to further our collection of historical items and paintings,” Perotti said. “Eventually it would be nice to have a gallery of pictures and make that part of the Town Hall.”

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