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Interesting question. Montanabw added the 1914 start date, but provided no reference for it actually being the same courthouse. The Federal Judicial Center states that this courthouse is "Still in use as a post office" (language that usually indicates that it is not still in use as a courthouse). The General Services Adminstration lists only the Baffin Courthouse, but the GSA generally does not administer post offices. Finally, I went to Google Maps, punched in the addresses, and got two distinctively different buildings, the James F. Baffin Courthouse being much larger and decidedly not 1914 architecture. Probably a Public Buildings Act construction. This leaves the current post office as having previously also been a courthouse, the one referenced by the FJC. bd2412T18:24, 28 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
By the way, there's a public domain image of the NRHP-listed post office on the FJC page. I'll clean it up and post it tonight, if no one gets to it before that. Cheers! bd2412T21:23, 28 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Um, people, it's BATTIN, not "Baffin." See James F. Battin. And that building of that name is the current primary federal courthouse currently in use in Billings today. This may help you sort out the buildings: "The United States courthouse located at 316 North 26th Street in Billings, Montana, shall be known and designated as the `James F. Battin United States Courthouse.' http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery/R?cp106:FLD010:@1(hr021) (February 23, 1999) If I screwed up two buildings that are close together, it's possible. I haven't needed to appear in federal court over in Billings, so haven't paid all that much attention to which of all the official buildings in that neighborhood are which. Montanabw(talk)03:17, 29 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]