Route II: South & East Charlotte
Elizabeth Ave. is an
extension of uptown's Trade St. Back in the 1890s it was a logical
place for city expansion. A month after he launched Dilworth, E.D.
Latta helped to form a group of investors to develop the area; he
formed the Highland Park Company which included a real estate
developer, Walter S. Alexander, and a businessman, Walter Brem,
whose house we saw in Dilworth. The name of this development
company is significant, and it illustrates the connection between
Charlotte's real estate development and textile industry, for the
Highland Park Company was closely related to the Highland Park cotton mill of North
Charlotte.
Initially the venture
experienced the same slow start and consumer resistance that
threatened Dilworth. However, in
1897 Walter Alexander decided that the company should donate a
large block of land at the top of the hill to attract a Lutheran
women's college that was seeking a location. The college came to be
called Elizabeth
after the wife of its sponsor, and the scheme proved to be the
boost that the neighborhood needed. By 1903, Latta had extended the
E. Trade St. trolley line up the new boulevard, and many Charlotte
business leaders chose to live in the luxurious dwellings on
"Elizabeth Hill" where they could benefit from the genteel cultural
pursuits of the college. Only a handful of these houses survive
today. Central Piedmont Community College which located here in the
1960s in the buildings of the former Central High School now
dominates the avenue.

Elizabeth College
19. However, the Richard C. Biberstein House at
1600 Elizabeth Ave. gives some idea of the character of the old
neighborhood. Notice how the style of this house is similar to that
of the first phase of building in Dilworth. Richard C. Biberstein
was an engineer and designer of industrial buildings, mainly cotton
mills. The house was built in 1905. His papers are in the UNCC
Library.

The Richard C. Biberstein House
At the
junction at the top of hill between Elizabeth and Hawthorne, turn
left onto Hawthorne Lane.
20. Presbyterian Hospital now occupies
the site of Elizabeth
College. The college moved to Salem, Virginia, in 1915, and two
years later its buildings were adapted as a hospital. Presbyterian
Hospital moved here from its uptown location on W. Trade at Mint
St. where it had operated since 1903. The old college building
served the hospital until its demolition in 1980.
21. To the immediate left of the hospital
on your right is the grand
mansion built by William Henry Belk, the founder of Belk's
department stores. When he came to Charlotte to open a store in
1895, he was already a successful businessman, having operated a
store in Monroe with his brother. An advertisement for the original
Trade St. store gives us a flavor of Charlotte at the turn of the
century: "Catch the first train. Hitch up your beast or come at a
run if you expect to keep up with the crowds flocking to Belk
Brothers--Cheapest Store on Earth."

Belk Mansion
William Belk was not one to squander money. He
slept in a room over his shop and remained a bachelor until he was
52 years old, only then moving to this mansion in Elizabeth to rear
his family. An ardent Presbyterian, he helped to finance the move
of Presbyterian Hospital to the site of Elizabeth College. He and
his family originally lived in the old president's house close by,
but they had this mansion overlooking the city constructed in 1924.
The Belks chose C.C. Hook to design their Neoclassical house which
is executed in beige brick and stone.
Just
across 5th St. notice the church on your
right.
22. St. John's Baptist Church makes an
impressive sight as it stands on the corner of 5th and Hawthorne.
Its architect, J.M. McMichael, intended that impact. "A church
building should not hide its light under a bushel but rather should
be built as a lamp set upon a hill whose light cannot be hid."
McMichael chose cream colored brick and limestone as the materials
for this "Roman Ionic" design. When
he built the church in 1925, McMichael had already established his
reputation as a church architect in Charlotte, having designed First Baptist Church (now
Spirit Square), Little
Rock A.M.E. Zion Church (now the Afro-American Cultural
Center), and the Tabernacle A.R.P. Church on Trade St. Note the
six, two-story, Ionic columns with characteristic spiral scroll
molding on the capitals.

St. John's Baptist Church
23. Another department store owner, James
L. Staten, resided in the mansion on your right immediately beyond
St. John's Church. He had this elegant Neoclassical house built
in 1911. Today this gracious building acts as the headquarters of
International House, a non-profit organization which assists
internationals in adjusting to life in the United States and
facilitates interaction between Americans and internationals.
At the
junction of Hawthorne Lane and 7th St., notice Independence
Park.
24. The Elizabeth neighborhood continued
to expand. Subsequent development companies bought adjacent farms
and commenced building. To attract customers, several companies
donated land which was landscaped as Charlotte's first public park,
and proudly christened in 1906 with the name Independence Park. Only a small part
of the park remains today, since much of it was sacrificed to build
Independence Blvd. in 1949, but in its heyday it provided locals
with tennis courts, a rose garden, and landscaped lawns. The
landscaping was the first Charlotte project of the Harvard-trained
John Nolen. It was a
lucky commission for Nolen, since it introduced him to George
Stephens who was to employ him seven years later to design and
landscape his Myers Park suburb.
Cross
7th St. and turn right at the next junction onto 8th St. Stop to
view the first house on
your left.
25. This was Harry Golden's last
Charlotte residence before his death in 1981. When he arrived in
Charlotte in 1941, he brought with him a strong sense of his New
York Jewish immigrant background. This was reflected in his witty
and controversial bi-monthly newspaper, the Carolina
Israelite. During the late 1950s and 1960s he gained national
acclaim as one of the great liberal voices in favor of racial
integration. He is perhaps best remembered for his "Golden Vertical
Plan Of Integration." He sardonically pointed out that since the
South's blacks and whites managed quite well at grocery counters,
bank teller windows, and other places where they were not required
to sit down together, then perhaps seats should be removed from
schools, buses, theaters, and restaurants to assist integration in
those places!

Moore-Golden House
Continue on 8th St. Cross Lamar and pull to the
curb.
26. To your left is one of three
buildings erected in this area to house members of the Alexander
family. The Alexanders moved to Charlotte from Union County, North
Carolina, after the Civil War, and quickly made a name for
themselves in the city. During the 1890s, they became involved in
real estate development, Walter S. Alexander controlling the
Highland Park Company which developed Elizabeth Avenue. In 1904,
his brother John and son Walter developed this area of Elizabeth,
and John bought a whole block of land here for family houses two
years later. In 1913, he built his own house on the corner of
Clement and 8th St.
This
duplex was built by his sister Jennie in 1921. J.M. McMichael
was hired as the architect, and the popular new Bungalow style was
chosen. The Bungalow first gained popularity in California during
the 1890s, where its modest simplicity challenged the ostentation
and complexity of late Victorian dwellings. It was not until the
building boom of the 1910s and 1920s that the Bungalow became one
of the predominant styles in Charlotte. It was particularly well
suited to smaller middle class homes, but it could also be adapted
to grand proportions. Bungalows are distinguished by their
prominent roof, with wide eaves sweeping over a large porch
supported by squat columns. They often have dormer windows,
shingled walls, and plain rustic decoration, such as stone
chimneys. The overall effect is intended to be functional, and
unnecessary decoration is avoided.

Jennie Alexander Duplex
Continue on 8th St. Turn left onto Clement and pause to view
the first two houses on your left.
27. You will notice that Clement Ave. is
unusually wide in comparison with its neighbors. The reason is that
it was originally intended as a grand boulevard for a streetcar
line from 7th St. to Central. The line, however, was never built
which has preserved Clement as a quiet neighborhood street.
John Baxter Alexander built his house on the corner in
1913 and his nephew Walter virtually copied the design with the house he built next door in
1915. Both houses display features of the Bungalow style: wood
shingle siding, rustic stone trim, large porches, dormers and broad
eaves with brackets, although the earlier house still retains some
classical influences.

The John Baxter Alexander House
Continue on Clement Ave. Pass 9th St. and turn right onto Bay
St. Turn left at the intersection with Pecan and cross the Seaboard
Coastline Railway. Continue on Pecan across Independence Blvd. At
the T-junction with Central Ave., turn
right.
28. Notice the old gas station facing you at this
intersection. When it was first erected by the Pure Oil Company in
1936 its homely cottage style was intended to blend in with the
neighborhood dwellings. This is clearly not the case with the 1951
Dairy Queen across Pecan to the left.

Pure Oil Gas Station

Dairy Queen
Turn left onto the
Plaza at the traffic lights.
29. The commercial center in the vicinity
of this intersection flourished during the 1920s. It is interesting
to note that the main boulevards, with a streetcar line running
down the center median, used to unite neighborhoods, whereas today,
in the age of the automobile, they have become the divisions
between neighborhoods. Thus, before Independence Boulevard was
built, Elizabeth residents would have considered this to be their
local shopping area, too. Among the many landmarks near this
junction is the first grocery store that W.T. Harris opened in
1936, the predecessor of the Harris Teeter supermarket chain that
we have today.
Continue touring...
This site was created using a Macintosh Performa 6290 by Bruce Schulman. This site is
maintained for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks
Commission by Bruce R. Schulman.
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