US Post Office Mural
123 N 5th
Installed in 1938 on the lobby walls of the Neodesha Post
Office is a WPA mural entitled "Neodesha's First Inhabitants" painted by Bernard
Steffen. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
because because this mural is one of a limited number of artist works that were
commissioned in the depression era by the WPA to keep our country's cultural
talents employed during the financial crisis.
Steffen painted this on four masonite panels instead of canvas. The setting of
the mural is staged about where 4th street now runs. The mural depicts the
friendly relations between the Osage Indians of southeastern Kansas and the
early white settlers. On the right side of the panels, Chief Little Bear waves
to Dr. T. Blakeslee, a physician responsible for much of the peacefulness
between the two cultures. Little Bear's wife and daughter stand behind him.
Blakeslee, mounted on horseback, waves back. On the left side of the panels, the
Indian tribe works busily in front of their teepees, carving canoes, making
pots, tanning hides, drying meats, and carrying wood. A field of grain grows
close to the left corner of the panel. Tows of corn slope down the rolling hills
toward the white settlement.