Paintings on Historic Vaults Uncovered at Wyoming Capitol
Recent restoration work has uncovered vibrant oil paintings on six vault doors located in the garden level of the Wyoming Capitol.
The public can view the vault discoveries and learn more about the entire project at the July 10th at the Capitol Square Open House and Celebration. More than 130 years after it first opened to the public, the Wyoming Capitol is reopening after a critical restoration.
EverGreene Architectural Arts made the discovery in late May, by carefully removing several layers of paint. Uncovering each door took between one and two days. Up to this point, restoration work had only uncovered gold pinstriping over a black finish on the vault doors located on the first floor. Nobody thought that the six Mosler Safe and Lock Co. vaults located in the 1888 section of the garden level would have such elaborate decoration underneath the dull brown paint.
The Capitol’s vault doors likely date back to before 1891 and were placed during the 1888 or 1890 building phases. All the vaults have lettering listing Cincinnati, Ohio and come from the Mosler Safe Company.
The Mosler Safe Company was one of the largest manufacturers of safes and vault doors. Among their more notorious safe projects are the United States Gold Storage Vault at Fort Knox, Kentucky; the 50-ton safe that guards the original Declaration of Independence and Constitution and Bill of Rights; and the famous bank vaults that withstood the atomic bomb at Hiroshima.
As for the six beautiful paintings found on the doors, the artists remain a mystery. None of the six paintings are signed, and the stenciling varies on each vault door. Elaborate decorations on vault doors and Mosler safes were not unusual for the time. An ad in the May 26, 1896 Semi-Weekly Boomerang shows a painting on one of the doors. The project is still researching more information about the vaults.
To view more photos of the restoration project, see the vaults in person, and attend the Capitol opening July 10th: