Pineville Survey
Final Report
Paul Archambault
and Dr. Dan L.
Morrill
November 2004
Click here to view a video on 316 and 330 Main Street in Pineville,
both of these properties are currently for sale by the Commission
A. Statement of Purpose. To
determine the historic significance of individual historic properties and
collections of historic properties one must have an understanding and
appreciation of the historic context within which they appear. This
paper sets forth the principal forces that have shaped the evolution of
the built or man-made environment of Pineville, North Carolina. The
intent is to identify those properties that should be given some level of
protection in order to safeguard the historic character of the town.
B. Methodology. Paul Archambault, the principal
investigator, worked under the supervision of Dr. Dan L. Morrill to
conduct a comprehensive survey of the historic elements of
the built environment of Pineville, including photographing
properties, conducting historical research, consulting archives and
relevant public documents, and writing physical and architectural
descriptions of each significant structure. The principal
investigator also, when possible, interviewed individuals who had
knowledge about specific properties or aspects of Pineville's history.
All findings were placed on the internet to make the information readily
accessible for public review. It is important to understand that
certain properties, such as the former Pineville Academy (1867) on Gay
Street (now Johnston Drive), although historic, were not included in this
survey because they lack the requisite physical integrity.
Click Here
For Full List Of Properties Surveyed.
The principal investigator
recognizes that some significant properties might have been inadvertently
excluded and welcomes public input into this process. Also,
the principal investigator understands that some individuals might come
forward with information that will supplement or correct information that
is contained herein. The survey of historic resources in the built
or man-made environment is a process, not a product.
C. Historical Context.
1.
Introduction. Pineville, N.C., located approximately eleven miles south of Charlotte,
N.C. and incorporated in 1873, initially began as a railroad depot on the
Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad, which opened in October 1852.
It gained greater importance as an agricultural support center and
textile town in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The older
buildings on Main Street, College Street, Johnston Drive (formerly Gay
Street), Cone Avenue, Fisher Street, James Street, Dover
Street, and Park Avenue, are reflective of the town's dramatic growth
during these years. Finally, the last two decades have witnessed a
fundamental transformation of Pineville as the spread of suburban
development, both residential and commercial, has engulfed much of the
surrounding countryside.
Prominent businessmen, such
as C. S. Oakley, Samuel Younts, William Yandell, and Jim Miller, built or
occupied the imposing older homes on Main Street. The 300 block of
Main Street contains a collection of corbeled brick store buildings that
formed the commercial core of Pineville by the early 1900s. Included
among these structures was a general store, barbershop, post office,
drugstore, and a doctor's office. Unfortunately, Pineville has lost
its train depot. Pineville is fortunate, however,
in still having the Cone Mills Mill Village virtually intact, both in terms of
housing and townscape. Indeed, the mill village, particularly because
of its street layout devised by Earle Sumner Draper, is important to Mecklenburg County as a whole. There are also two historic church buildings
in the town -- Pineville Presbyterian Church and Lawrence Chapel
Presbyterian Church. Finally, the town does have a few
remaining examples of middle class housing on its early outskirts,
especially on College Street and Johnston Drive.
2. The
Evolution of Pineville's Built Environment.
Before
the presence of railroads in Mecklenburg County, crops from
local farms were transported to market by river and
roads. The establishment of railroad lines in the 1850s allowed goods to be
shipped more efficiently and more quickly. By 1860, four railroads crossed
Mecklenburg County; and, as a result, several
outlying towns came into
existence along these new transportation routes. They included Pineville,
Huntersville, Matthews, Cornelius, and Davidson. [1]
By 1900, Pineville had become the largest of
Mecklenburg County's outlying towns. Like the others, Pineville's
economy was based upon cotton. In addition to having a cotton mill
and its associated housing, the town provided supplies, tools, draft
animals, and other assorted goods to the the cotton farmers who inhabited
the surrounding countryside.
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An Early 20th Century
View Of Main Street |
The Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad that
extended from Charlotte to Columbia
(1852), later the Charlotte, Columbia, and Augusta Railroad, played a pivotal
role in the evolution of Pineville and its built environment in the second
half of
the 19th century. Pineville, originally a stagecoach stop
named “Morrow’s Turnout,” developed around a depot on the Charlotte,
Columbia, and Augusta Railroad. The station was
named “Pineville” because of the “many large and beautiful pines casting
their shadows over the community.”[2]
During the Reconstruction Era following the Civil War, Mecklenburg County experienced
substantial growth due to its cotton economy. Pineville, like
Huntersville, Cornelius, Matthews, and Davidson, was constructed around a booming
cotton and mule market; and in 1873 Pineville was officially incorporated.
[3]
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This 1870 Timetable
Of The Charlotte, Columbia, and Augusta Railroad shows Morrow's
or Pineville as the first stop south from Charlotte. |
The growth in business activities and in the economy
of Pineville and the Piedmont as a whole was due in part to
influential businessmen. In Charlotte, D.A. Tompkins, R. M. Miller, E. A. Smith,
and others were
erecting cotton mills. Mecklenburg County's outlying towns also had
enterprising New South merchants and industrialists.[4]
Samuel Younts, a resident and a founder of Pineville, achieved prosperity in
the town when he moved to Mecklenburg County soon after the Civil War. Younts began his
successful career when he opened a general store and later became a cotton
salesman as well as a banker. All of the prominent Pineville leaders and
businessmen, like Samuel Younts, Charles
Oakley, William Yandell, and Bill Blankenship,
built their homes on the most prestigious streets of Pineville, namely
Main, Polk, College, and Gay (Johnston Drive). These same
businessmen were active in local politics and in local churches, including
providing most of the money for building houses of worship for the
residents of Pineville.
[5]
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Younts House |
Oakley House |
Religion, specifically Christianity, has occupied a
central place in Pineville's history, the primary dominations being Methodist, Presbyterian, and Baptist. Before any churches were
established in Pineville, Presbyterians and Methodists worshiped in a one-room
schoolhouse at 401 Johnston Drive. Pineville has six congregations that date
from the nineteenth century, although the town has only two historic
church structures. They are the former Pineville Presbyterian
Church and the former Lawrence Chapel Presbyterian Church.
The Pineville Presbyterian Church was founded and constructed
in 1876.
Samuel Younts and his son, John, deeded land on the corner of Main Street and
College Street to the board of trustees of the Presbyterian Church on
January 22, 1876. The cost of construction was $2,000; and the church
was reportedly built from brick made from clay on the banks of Sugar Creek. The first
service took place on Sunday, April 2, 1876. Reverend G. S. Robinson
delivered the sermon.[6]
Methodists joined the Presbyterians in worshipping at the Pineville
Presbyterian Church for two years. As Pineville
continued to grow in the late nineteenth century, the
Pineville Methodist Church was built on Polk Street. The building was constructed
of brick and was funded by Samuel Younts, J .A.
Ardrey, M. M. Yandle,
and Edward Yandle. The Pineville
Methodist Church has been replaced twice since 1881; and, unfortunately, the original
building no longer exists.[7]
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Lawrence Chapel
Presbyterian Church |
Pineville
Presbyterian Church (1876) |
The
Lawrence Presbyterian Church purchased a lot on Myers Lane from Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Younts in 1888. The original
structure was replaced by the present building, and this sanctuary remained in
service until 1974 when the congregation merged with the Metropolitan Presbyterian
Church in Charlotte. In 1975, the Lawrence Presbyterian Church sold the edifice to
Pineville native, Edward Davis; and he currently uses the structure as a
furniture upholstery business.[8]
Many residents, including inhabitants of the Dover
or Cone Mills Mill Village, were Baptist and attended
what is now Stough Memorial Baptist Church. Reverend
A. L. Stough, a German immigrant, founded the
Pineville Baptist Church in 1903 and served as its pastor for three years.
Theretofore Baptists in Pineville had gone to nearby Flint Hill Baptist Church to worship. In 1911,
The Pineville Baptist Church was renamed “Stough
Memorial Baptist Church.” The sanctuary was demolished, and the present brick
building at 412 Johnston Drive was constructed in 1950.
[9]
The
first school in Pineville was located in what is now a home at 401 Johnston
Drive. The Pineville Academy, originally a boy’s school and a place
of worship, was built in 1867. Other private schools stood on Main Street, College Street, and Polk Street
between 1867 and 1914. A
two-story brick building on Polk Street served as the Pineville Farm Life
Vocational Agriculture School and was built in 1914 by John Miller, Sr.
The school had grades one through eleven, and it remained in service until
1950 when the students began to attend East Mecklenburg High School.[10]
The
Younts House (1873) is the oldest "high style" home in Pineville. Younts erected a
two-story, brick, gable-front-and-wing house with Italianate details that
reflected his economic standing in the town. The house has
elaborate detailing on the interior and exterior, further exemplifying Mr.
Younts’s wealth. His home later served
as the community hospital where Dr. Ralph Reid, son of a former Pineville
doctor, worked long hours as the only physician in Pineville.[11]
During
the post World War I expansion in Pineville, homes, some with
Craftsman style detailing, were erected for the foremen and
the operatives or rank-and-file workers at the Cone Mills. Bankers,
merchants, and traders also built dwellings in styles that were representative of
the early
twentieth century. People such as C. S. Oakley,
President of the Pineville Loan and Savings Bank and the Pineville Lumber
Company, and William Yandell constructed grand
Craftsman Bungalow homes. There was an obvious distinction between
the homes of the wealthy and those of the mill workers in Pineville,
indicating the class separation that existed in the town.
C. S.
Oakley built his dwelling on Main Street in the early 1920s. His grand
town home with Prairie Style and Craftsman details is unique in
Pineville in terms of architectural form. The two-story
cross-gabled home with a gabled front porch and sophisticated
architectural detailing is indicative of the owner's economic position.
The Oakley House subsequently became the abode of some of Pineville’s
leading citizens, including Richard Eubanks, plant manager for the
Southern Cotton Oil Company, and, more recently, Charles Yandell,
a pharmacist, pharmaceutical salesman, and former Pineville Mayor. William Yandell was also a prominent Pineville businessman.
William, Charles Yandell's father, constructed his Craftsman Bungalow home on the corner of Main and Johnston
in the early 1900s. It is prototypically
Craftsman Bungalow, with a full-width porch supported by tapered posts, a
low-pitched, gabled roof which has exposed rafter ends ,and
decorative support brackets. [12]
In 1902,
Pineville's cotton business received a major boost when the Dover
Yarn Mills was purchased by the larger Chadwick-Hoskins Mills, which
initially employed approximately two hundred people in its Pineville
plant.[17]
In 1915, Jim and Leitner Miller
strengthened the local cotton infrastructure when they constructed a cotton
gin; and increasing numbers of farmers from the surrounding
countryside began bringing wagonloads of cotton to town
to sell as the mainstay of their livelihood.[18]
These developments led to the construction and expansion of a substantial mill village
south of Main Street. Most of the textile
employees, including those in Pineville, were former white yeoman farmers who
had migrated with their families to
town in search of employment. Families in the mill village led a
largely self-sufficient, essentially rural lifestyle. They cultivated
gardens and raised chickens, cows, and pigs.
As a general rule,
cotton mills rented homes to their workers and their families for one
dollar per week along with water, ice, coal, and wood for the stoves.
Workers labored long hours and experienced harsh conditions in the mill.
A typical work week lasted six days and averaged 12 to 16 hours per day.
Pineville natives and residents such as Harold Smith and Holt
Earnheart recall their fathers working double
shifts and coming home to "catch a few hours of sleep." Smith’s
father became an employee of the the mill in Pineville at the age of six in
1908, and he continued working there until 1968.[19]
Construction of the mill village in Pineville began
in the early 1900s, and the village expanded substantially in
1920 under the direction of noted town planner Earle Sumner Draper, who
had been hired by Chadwick-Hoskins to oversee the project. Draper's
plan consisted of a semi-rural mill
community with a grid pattern of streets, a boulevard with a median at the
heart of the village, and half-acre house sites, so
residents could continue to grow vegetables and raise farm animals. This
arrangement, it was hoped, would allow the
former farmers-turned-mill-hands to adapt to “city” or “town life.”[20]
Pineville's mill houses, as in other Southern textile villages, were
essentially utilitarian in scale and design. The original mill workers’ homes,
erected in the early 1900s,
were white frame, gable-roofed and T-plan cottages. Queen Anne
cottage-style homes, located on the north end of the mill village on Dover
Street, were constructed at about the same time for the mill’s overseers. During the expansion of the town in the 1920s,
story-and-a-half homes with Craftsman-Bungalow style porches were
constructed on Cone Avenue for the foremen; and one-story square cottages with
hip roofs, shed dormers, and inset porches were built for the
operatives.[21]
Interestingly, Earle Draper ordered plans and materials for these later
houses from a company in Charleston, South Carolina called “Quick-bill
Bungalows.”
[22]
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A typical mill
workers house. |
This more substantial
home on Dover Street would have been for a foreman or overseer. |
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A "Quick-bill
Bungalow" on Cone Ave. |
Only two paved roads existed in Pineville as late as the 1930s --
Highway 521 (Polk Street) and Highway 21 (Main Street). Almost everybody
who lived in Pineville or on surrounding farms conducted their business on
Main Street. The Younts family, and
later the Yandell's and Miller's, owned a
good portion of the stores on Main Street.[13]
Main Street in Pineville, as in nearby Matthews, ran perpendicular to the railroad
and consisted of one block of businesses, which included
general stores, drug stores, livery stables, banks, barbershops, hotels,
and a post office.[14]
Main Street was bordered by trees, and the commercial buildings were one or two
stories tall and constructed of red brick.
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Main Street in
Pineville |
The Miller family owned most of the stores that were on the north side of
Main Street, including four grocery stores. Robert
Hair owned a drugstore on Main Street which had a soda fountain and one of the
town's first television sets -- making the drugstore a popular gathering
place for teenagers. Other businesses on the northern side of Main Street included a hardware
store managed by Charlie Howie, which served
as a gathering place on Saturday nights for farmers, a feed and seed store
owned by Bill Blankenship, a gun shop operated by Joseph
Ardrey, and Bryant
Bailes’s barbershop and pool room.[15]
William Yandell owned the
businesses on the south side of Main Street. They included a grocery store
with a hotel upstairs at Main Street and
Dover Street. In addition, Yandell
had an office where customers and tenants could pay rent, apply for a loan, or seek legal
advice. Main Street also contained
Bill Blankenship’s ice house, Bo McCoy’s barbershop, a movie theater, post
office, and filling station.[16]
Growth
in Pineville slowed markedly after the Great Depression of the 1930s, when cotton
production declined precipitously in the Carolina Piedmont and agriculture
as a whole became less important in Mecklenburg County. In 1946,
Cone Mills purchased the mill in Pineville, constructed additions to the
plant, and renovated the mill
village homes by adding bathrooms and asbestos shingles. Somewhat
later,
Cone Mills sold the houses in the mill village and ceased being a landlord
for its workers. Inevitably, the mill houses began to evidence
greater variety, as the new owners modified them to suit their individual
needs and tastes. [23]
A significant portion of the mill village survives, including Earle
Sumner Draper's distinctive townscape.
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Earle Sumner Draper |
The 1990s witnessed a
fundamental transformation of Pineville's built or man-made environment.
No longer serving its initial role as a cotton trading and production
center and as a place where farmers could come to obtain draft animals and
supplies, the town has been virtually inundated by the impact of
suburbanization. The completion of I-485 to connect with I-77 and
the widening of N.C. 51 gave rise to a plethora of retail establishments,
including the very large Carolina Place Mall. Polk Street,
especially north of its intersection with Main Street, has lost its
traditional small town character. As for the historic commercial
core of the town along Main Street, many of the historic brick buildings
survive, but they are now mostly antique shops and consignment shops.