THE CENTER CITY: The Business District and the Original Four
Wards
By Dr. Thomas W. Hanchett
The history of Charlotte's Center City area is largely a story
of what is no longer there. The grid of straight streets that lies
within today's innermost expressway loop was the whole of Charlotte
less than one hundred years ago. Today it contains a cluster of
skyscrapers, three dozen residential blocks, and a vast area of
vacant land with only scattered buildings. This essay will trace
the Center City's development, then look at the significant
pre-World War II structures remaining in each of the area's four
wards.
The Center City has experienced three distinct development
phases as Charlotte has grown from a village to a town to a major
city. In the first phase, the area was the entire village. It was
what geographers term a "walking city," arranged for easy
pedestrian movement with the richest residents living the shortest
walk to the commercial core. This era lasted from settlement in
1753 through the 1880s.
In 1891 the new electric trolley
system transformed Charlotte into a "streetcar city" with new
suburbs surrounding the old village. In the old Center City the
commercial core expanded, clustered around the trolley crossroads
at Independence Square. Residence continued to be important, and
the area continued to grow in population, but now the wealthy moved
outward to the suburbs and the middle class and poor moved
inward.
In the 1930s and 1940s the automobile replaced the trolley as
Charlotte's prime people mover, and the Center City changed again.
Cars could go anywhere, and in the decades following the Second
World War the old trolley crossroads diminished in importance.
Commercial and office uses scattered to inexpensive suburban land.
Public and private demolition in the 1960s and 1970s cleared almost
all the houses and small stores in the name of "renewal." By the
1980s, half of Charlotte's residents never regularly visited the
Center City. 1
The Center City's history begins with Trade and Tryon streets,
the original Indian paths whose junction inspired the village's
settlement. They became the Center City's main arteries, crossing
at Independence Square near the center of the grid. The first one
hundred acres of blocks around the square were laid out under the
direction of Charlotte founder Thomas Polk in the 1760s.
2 The blocks were nearly square, each about 400 feet
long on a side. Polk's grid was set at an unusual 45 degree angle
to the points of the compass to conform to the routes of the
existing Indian trails.
By 1855, the original survey had been extended to approximately
220 blocks. 3 They comprised all of today's grid,
stretching from Smith Street to McDowell, then called East Boundary
Street, in one direction and from Morehead Street through Twelfth
in the other. Although all were mapped before the Civil War, it
took decades before some streets were built, McDowell for instance
not being graded until the turn of the century. 4
In the 1850s the village had become populous enough to split the
grid into four sub-sections for election purposes. The city fathers
drew boundary lines down the middle of Trade and Tryon streets,
making each quadrant of the village a separate political "ward"
with its own elected representative. Outer boundaries of these
wards expanded as the city grew, until 1907 when a ring of seven
new suburban wards was added around the first four. 5 In
1945 Charlotte abandoned the ward system in favor of officials
elected at large. 6 Institutions like Second Ward High
School and First Ward Elementary kept the old names alive in the
Center City, however, and today Charlotte's original neighborhoods
are still known as First, Second, Third and Fourth Wards.
Gray's New Map of Charlotte, published in 1882 near the
end of the "walking city" era, gives a good picture of that first
phase of development. 7 It shows a village about a mile
in diameter clustered around the Trade and Tryon crossroads. Beyond
what are now Morehead, McDowell, Twelfth and Cedar streets there
were farmers' fields, less than a ten minute walk from the
Square.
At the center of the village was the commercial core of one and
two story brick and frame stores. The commercial area extended only
one block from the square in each direction along North and South
Tryon streets and West Trade Street. On East Trade, stores
stretched two blocks to the railroad tracks and also turned the
corners onto North and South College streets a short distance.
Downtown's bulge in this easterly direction reflected the great
impact that the city's first railroad had on mid-nineteenth century
Charlotte.
This track, serving the 1852 Charlotte and Columbia and the 1854
North Carolina State Railroad, ran north-south between College and
Brevard streets. 8 By the time the 1882 map was drawn,
another line paralleled it on the other side of the commercial
core. Built by the A. T. & O. and the Atlanta and Charlotte Air
Line, this track ran between Graham and Cedar streets. The two
parallel rail rights-of-way through the Center City crossed a third
track at Thirteenth Street at the edge of the district, built for
the Carolina Central. As years went by each of these lines was
double tracked, and freight yards were built between Cedar and
Graham and between Brevard and College.
Land use outside the small commercial core in 1882 might be a
surprise to present day Charlotteans. Because most people usually
walked where they were going, the most desirable residential sites
were those closest to the center, requiring the least walking.
Charlotte's wealthiest citizens lived immediately adjacent to the
village's downtown on Trade and Tryon streets. No direction was
more popular than another. The handsome William Johnston mansion,
for example, stood on West Trade at Graham. Wealthy landowner W. R.
Myers lived on East Trade. The estates of civic leaders J. L.
Morehead and Civil War general D. H. Hill faced each other
across South Tryon, between Morehead Street and Hill Street. On
North Tryon at what is now Phifer Avenue was the grand old Phifer
plantation house with its pre-war slave row. 9
Intermixed with the fine houses were the village's half-dozen
leading churches, including the predecessors of present-day First
Presbyterian, St. Peter's Episcopal, St. Peters Catholic, and First Baptist.
Interestingly, in the 1880s the fine houses were found only on
the busiest thoroughfares. Side street blocks, even when they were
a shorter walk from downtown, were the province of the middle
class. Geographers who have studied America's "walking cities" have
noted that most follow a concentric ring pattern, with the
commercial core surrounded by a ring of wealthy residents, then a
ring of middle-class, and finally a ring of poor. Charlotte's
wealthy residents did not completely ring the core in accordance
with this pattern.
The grouping of grand houses on the busiest streets may be a
distinctively southern practice. The pattern may be observed, for
example, in nearby Concord, North Carolina, where residential areas
remain much as they were in the nineteenth and early twentieth
century. Researcher John Kellog has noted the same tendency in
Lexington, Kentucky, in the same period. 10 Southerners
evidently enjoyed building their mansions where visitors could best
notice them.
Beyond the two main streets of nineteenth century Charlotte, the
concentric ring theory seems to apply. Back from Trade and Tryon in
the four wards were the middle class and finally, toward the edge
of the city at the farthest walking distance from the Square, the
dwellings of the poor. Buildings on Gray's 1882 map get smaller and
smaller as one moves out from the center.
Also close to the edge of the city were non-residential uses
that needed inexpensive land: schools, factories, and cemeteries.
The Carolina Military Institute was near present-day Morehead and
Brevard streets, the Charlotte Female College was at Ninth and
College, and the Graded School, the city's early elementary school,
was at Tenth and what is now Caldwell. One may note the parallel
between the location of the early schools and the site of today's
University of North Carolina at Charlotte, incidentally, all at the
edge of the city where land is least costly. Other fringe land uses
in 1882 included the recently created Elmwood and Pinewood
cemeteries, the fledgling Charlotte Cotton Mill, and the
prosperous Mecklenburg Iron Works. All were located in the area of
West Trade and Graham streets, then the edge of the village.
The streetcar era of
development began with the introduction of the horse-drawn
streetcar in 1887, but started in earnest when the system was
electrified in 1891. 11 Charlotte was growing quickly as
a textile and distribution center for the New South. The growth did
not follow established patterns, however, but forged new ones as
Charlotte changed from a "walking city" to a "streetcar city." A
building map by the Sanborn Insurance Company, drawn in 1929 near
the end of this second development phase, illustrates how this
transformation affected the Center City. 12
The Center City continued to have many residences, but it was
now the commercial and office center for a city of nearly 83,000
citizens. 13 By the 1920s mass transit had turned the
old "walking city" ring pattern inside out. Wealthiest citizens
were moving out of the Center City to a new ring of "streetcar
suburbs" including Myers Park, Elizabeth, Dilworth and Wilmore.
A major effect of this change was a greatly expanded commercial
core. The bigger city needed more stores and offices. The 1929 map
shows the commercial area extending out to West Trade Street to the
Post Office beyond Mint Street, along East Trade Street past
Brevard, up North Tryon as far as Eighth, and down South Tryon to
Stonewall. Most buildings were three and four story brick
structures, but half a dozen skyscrapers jutted above the church
spires.
Trade and Tryon were no longer the only commercial streets.
Hundreds of small stores lined College and Church streets all the
way from First Street to Sixth. Businesses dominated the first
blocks of South Poplar, North Brevard, South Mint, First, Second,
Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh streets as well. One could
walk four or more blocks from the Square in any direction and pass
nothing but businesses. The Center City was bustling like no time
before or since.
Beyond the central business district, fine houses were still to
be found on Trade Street and Tryon Street, and on College and
Church streets which had become fashionable addresses in the 1890s.
The suburbs were the choice location for new mansions after the
l910s, but many of the established families continued to live in
their downtown residences. The major churches reflected this
reality by building new, larger sanctuaries in the Center City.
Old First Baptist (now
Spirit Square), St. Peter's Episcopal, St. Peters Catholic
and the now demolished Second Presbyterian Church (site of
Kimbrell's Furniture today) were all constructed on Tryon Street
between 1893 and 1908.14 First United Methodist
and First A. R. P.,
both erected on North Tryon in the mid 1920s, show how recently
that area was a highly desirable place to live.

First United Methodist Church
Back from the business district and the main streets there was
still a large amount of Center City residential area. Blocks which
had had only a house or two in 1882 were filled up by 1929, all the
way to the edge of the grid. On some residential streets nearest
the Square, small apartment buildings, like the Frederick on North
Church Street or the Poplar on West Tenth, replaced old
single-family houses.
Around the edges of the grid there were a few new residential
streets, filling out what is now thought of as the Center City.
These did not usually follow the urban grid but instead followed
the more random suburban prototype. There were a few new streets,
in addition to Hill and Vance, in Second and Third Wards between
First Street and Morehead Street. Development also finally passed
Cedar Street, and residences now extended all the way to Irwin
Creek, the route of I-77 today. These areas are now thought of as
part of the Center City, but they were conceived and advertised as
"streetcar suburbs." They were served by the West Trade trolley
line and called "Woodlawn" on the Third Ward side of West Trade,
and "Irwin Park," on the Fourth Ward side. 15 These new
streets extended the Center City to its current boundaries.
Higher education had moved to the suburbs by 1929 in search of
cheap land. Wards One through Four did have public schools, though.
16 In First Ward there was First Ward Elementary for
white children and Alexander Street Elementary for blacks.
Predominantly black Second Ward had black Second Ward High, and the
wood-frame Myers Street Elementary school for blacks. Third Ward
had a white elementary school on South Church Street. Fourth Ward
had white Bethune Elementary at Ninth and Graham and black Fairview
at Thirteenth and Graham.
Most hospitals clustered in the Center City at the end of the
streetcar era. Charlotte's first hospital had been St. Peters, at the corner of
Sixth and Poplar streets in Fourth Ward in the 1870s. It was
followed by Good
Samaritan (now demolished) for blacks in Third Ward in the
1880s, reputedly the first privately funded black hospital in the
United States. By the 1900s, several medical facilities were to be
found in the blocks around the Square. These included the 1903
Presbyterian Hospital at the corner of West Trade and Church
streets, the 1906 Mercy Hospital's original quarters behind
St. Peters Catholic Church, D. A. Tompkins' Charlotte
Sanitarium, erected in 1907 at Seventh and Church Streets, and
the short-lived North
Carolina Medical College at Fifth and Church. 17
In the teens, the hospitals began to follow the trolley lines out
to cheap suburban land for their new buildings, led by Mercy in
1916 and Presbyterian in 1918, but Fourth Ward downtown remained
the acknowledged "medical center," as evidenced by the construction
in the late 1920s of the Professional Building at Seventh and North
Tryon, a high-rise housing numerous doctor's offices, as well as a
medical library.
The Center City's railroad lines in 1929 still ran much as they
had on the 1882 map, with the addition of the new Piedmont and
Northern electric interurban tracks in Third Ward. By 1929,
however, the land among them was almost all taken by factories and
warehouses, indicative of Charlotte's rising importance as a
distribution center. Streets crossed the railroad at grade except
in two places. A bridge built in the 1890s carried East Morehead
over the tracks at the corner of South Boulevard, and an underpass
nicknamed the "subway" carried East Trade under the railroad
between College and Brevard streets beginning in the 1910s.
18 These two bridges do not seem remarkable today, but
in the early twentieth century when dozens of daily trains backed
up traffic at other crossings, these bridges were very important.
Myers Park planner Earle Sumner Draper credits them as a spur to
the suburban development of southeast Charlotte in the late l910s
and 1920s, a major factor in that sector's emergence in the period
as the city's favorite residential area. 19
A map of "Uptown Charlotte Land Use, 1981," published in the
Atlas of Charlotte Mecklenburg, shows the results of the
Center City's third era of development. 20 As the center
of an "automobile city," the area has lost most of its residential
and commercial functions. The majority of property parcels are now
vacant.
Today the commercial area no longer extends several blocks in
every direction from the Square. Half a block back from Tryon, over
most of its length, there are now only parking lots. The once
bustling commercial side streets contain little but cleared land.
At the same time the commercial core has lengthened north and south
on Tryon, as 1950s motels interspersed with unused land replaced
eighteenth and nineteenth century mansions.
First Ward is largely vacant, dominated by the 1967 Earle
Village low-rise public housing project. In Second Ward a handful
of government buildings preside over acres of grass and parking.
Third and Fourth Wards are somewhat more lively, both having
retained some residential and commercial building stock
supplemented by new condominium construction, but both have many
empty parcels.
The story of the transformation of the Center City begins in the
1940s. Though Charlotte residents began driving automobiles in the
early 1900s, it took several decades before this new transportation
mode had a noticeable effect on land use patterns in the Center
City. The beginning of the changes came in 1946 when the first
section of Independence Boulevard opened. 21 The
expressway sliced through the heart of black Second Ward and then
eastward through the Elizabeth and Chantilly neighborhoods.
The expressway soon began to draw businesses from downtown to
the cheap farmland at the edge of the city. The trend accelerated
in 1956 when Park Road Shopping Center opened at what was then the
southern edge of the city. 22 Developed by Charlottean
A. V. Blankenship, it was the region's first major strip shopping
center. 23 It was quickly followed by a host of others,
including Charlottetown Mall in 1959 (now Market Square), which was
one of the first enclosed malls in the Southeast, and the luxurious
enclosed South Park in 1973. 24
As suburban lures pulled some businesses out of the Center City,
a combination of the automobile's need for parking with investment
and property tax policies pushed out others. Until the mid 1970s,
federal and state tax laws rewarded new construction but not
renovation of existing structures. At the same time, property taxes
were lower on vacant land than on land with buildings. In this
climate, investors demolished hundreds of the two and three story
structures that lined Church Street, College Street, other side
streets, and even parts of Trade and Tryon. They believed they
could get a better return leasing the land for parking with the
hope of new construction in the future, rather than renting the
existing buildings for business. An uncounted number of small
businessmen were pushed to suburban locations or forced into early
retirement. Today it is probable that fewer retail businesses
remain within a four block walk of the Square than existed there at
the turn of the century when Charlotte was a small town of less
than 20,000 residents.
The weakening of the commercial core was accompanied by the
demolition of the ring of housing around it. As early as the 1940s,
Charlotte's city fathers had begun considering "slum clearance".
25 At first, the phrase meant clearing up slum
conditions, not demolishing buildings. Despite anguished cries from
a few property owners that it was "unnecessary, unreasonable. .
.socialistic and un-American," the city began to enforce a Standard
Housing Ordinance in 1948. 26 It required that every
Charlotte dwelling unit have running water, an indoor toilet, tub
and shower, a kitchen sink, and adequate window screens to control
flies. Minimum room sizes and provision of hot water were
considered, but the city agreed with the protesting real estate
association that this would be too much to ask. 27
Though some houses were demolished, much of the city's worst
housing gradually began to be improved, as national magazines in
the early 1950s noted. 28
When the U. S. Government began its Urban Renewal program in the
1950s, thought in Charlotte shifted from helping low income
residents. 29 With an apparently unlimited supply of
Federal money in sight, it now seemed possible to eradicate all low
income housing and replace it with sparkling new business, office
and higher income residential structures. To head the new Urban
Renewal department, the city brought in Vernon Sawyer, who had
experience with redevelopment in Norfolk, Virginia. "Heart of
Norfolk Blitzed in Urban Renewal Project," the Charlotte
News enthusiastically headlined a 1960 article on the new
director's past work. "This 250-year old seaport has never been
bombed by an intercontinental ballistic missile, although it
sometimes seems a little that way." 30
Sawyer began clearance in Charlotte's Second Ward, also known as
Brooklyn, the long-time black residential area. The ward contained
some of the city's worst housing, crowded mid-block alleys built as
slums and barely maintained by slum landlords. The area also held
many of the city's black businesses, churches, and homeowners.
Between 1960 and 1967 Sawyer's Redevelopment Commission razed the
area in five stages, displacing 1007 families and 216 businesses
from a 213 acre tract. 31 Over the next decade, the
cleared land became the site of Charlotte's glistening Government
Plaza, with the remainder being sold at reduced rates to private
investors primarily for office development. Not a single new
residential unit was built to replace the 1480 structures
demolished. 32
Federal Urban Renewal officials were alarmed at the displacement
and threatened to cut off funds if Charlotte did not build new
public housing. 33 In response, the city bulldozed the
black residential core of First Ward, and in 1967 erected Earle
Village Homes, a 409 unit public housing project. 34
Opponents pointed out that the development actually contained fewer
units than had been demolished in First Ward to create it, and that
it thus did little to redress the Brooklyn displacement. Although
Earle Village's individual low-rise brick units by Charlotte
architect Louis Asbury have won praise for their home-like design,
many observers questioned the wisdom of such a large,
self-contained concentration of poverty, and as a result Charlotte
today has a policy of "scattered-site" public housing, small groups
of units blended into neighborhoods around the city.
The early 1970s saw the clearance of the remainder of First Ward
surrounding Earle Village, scattering 216 families and sixty-two
businesses. 35 When a lawsuit was filed in an attempt to
require renovation of existing homes instead of wholesale
clearance, the city responded by moving half a dozen homes to
Eighth Street at great expense and renovating them, a project the
newspapers were quick to dub "The Gilded Row." 36
A major portion of the residential area of Third Ward was
demolished at the same time. Three blocks of the city's commercial
core along East Trade Street were also leveled with Urban Renewal
money in these years, the site of the present NCNB tower, the Civic
Center, and a third block at East Trade and Brevard that remains
vacant today, ten years later. 37 In addition to massive
public demolition, hundreds more buildings were destroyed
privately. Generally relaxed building code enforcement allowed
landlords to run houses down, and when crackdowns came
periodically, owners usually stood to profit more by demolition
than rehabilitation. 38
By the end of the 1970s these policies of urban renewal had
cleared almost all Charlotte's areas of deliberately built shanty
housing. They had also resulted in clearance of the city's finest
Victorian residences, in both First and Fourth Wards, and
destruction of most of Charlotte's commercial area. The final
stages of clearance ironically came at a time when renovation of
Victorian homes became highly popular, and also at a time when
public officials slowly realized that there were not enough
developers waiting in line for the glut of vacant Center City
parcels, even at low prices.
The federal Urban Renewal program was replaced in the 1970s by
the Community Development Block Grant program. It has focused
increasingly on improving residential conditions through renovation
and some new construction, rather than on clearing residential
areas for non-residential use. Private demolition in Charlotte's
Center City continues, but there is scattered evidence that the
situation is beginning to change.
The redevelopment of Fourth Ward in the late 1970s and early
1980s set a new direction. 39 The city's 1966 master
plan, prepared by architect A. G. Odell, called for the old
residential district to be cleared and replaced with high-rise
residence towers and open space. Instead of backing this
demolition, however, citizens influenced by the growing nationwide
historic preservation movement salvaged a few of the remaining old
houses. Around this nucleus a large amount of low-rise condominium
construction has taken place. For the first time in decades, a
Center City neighborhood is once again a highly desirable
residential area.
Fourth Ward's success led to other projects. The few remaining
blocks of the old "Woodlawn" suburban area, now simply called
"Third Ward," are undergoing housing rehabilitation and condominium
construction modeled on Fourth Ward. The city has recently
sponsored creation of a plan for First Ward that takes as its first
premise the retention of all remaining buildings, and proposes new
low and moderate income housing plus commercial development. On
North Tryon Street (Old) First Baptist Church reopened in the late
1970s as Spirit Square, a city-funded "arts shopping center" with
theaters, studios, and galleries. Across the street, Discovery
Place, a glistening new science and technology museum, opened in
1981. It, Spirit Square, and the existing Public Library are
reestablishing the Center City as a cultural nucleus for
Charlotte.
This activity is a very small beginning, though. In the two
years since this survey began over two dozen more Center City
buildings have been replaced by vacant lots. The structures lost
range from warehouses, to two of the downtown's most successful
lunchtime restaurants, to the 1926 Wilder Building skyscraper.
Despite the new construction in Fourth Ward, the 1980 census
counted a scant 4042 residents in the Center City. 40
This total number is smaller than the population of Fourth Ward
alone in 1920, and less than the Center City has had at any time
since the 1860s. 41
First Ward:
First Ward has historically been the Center City's most racially
and economically integrated area. It has been the home of rich and
poor, black and white, including some of the city's finest homes
and businesses. Though hard hit by urban renewal, a surprising
amount still remains of the area's heritage.
In the years after the Civil War, First Ward was known as
Mechanicsville because of the large number of workers from the
Confederate Naval Yard across Trade Street who settled there.
42 The James B.
Galloway house at 702 North Brevard is a reminder of the
era, a cottage built in 1870 by a man who had come to the city to
work at the Naval Yard. 43 A later remnant of First
Ward's working-class past is the former Advent Christian Church, 115 N.
McDowell, now the centerpiece of an imaginative office condominium
project. It was built in 1919 by a congregation of such modest
means that architect Louis Asbury donated a set of plans he had
already developed for a chapel at the Andrew Jackson Training
School in Concord. 44

Advent Christian Church
First Ward's white working-class residents were evidently
amicable toward the idea of black neighbors. By 1897, and probably
much earlier, city directories showed the neighborhood was a
mixture of black and white. 45 There were some all-black
blocks, particularly on Alexander and Sixth streets, but on many
blockfronts black and white residents lived side by side. Though
patterns did shift over the decades, this integration was no
transitional phenomenon. Researcher Janette Greenwood has found
that integrated block-fronts persisted into the 1930s and that
whites did not leave the ward until demolition of adjacent Brooklyn
in the 1960s created a sudden, intense black demand for housing
elsewhere in the Center City. Greenwood's mapping of directory data
is corroborated by elderly former residents like Aurelia Tate
Henderson, who remembers, "The neighborhood was white and colored,
and I must say we got along very nice together. We didn't know what
it was to lock our house, on Seventh Street. We didn't even have a
key to the house. It stayed unlocked all the time."
46
Most black landmarks of First Ward succumbed to Urban Renewal,
including the imposing residence of the A.M.E. Zion bishop G. W.
Clinton on North Myers Street and the Hotel Alexander on North
McDowell where Louis Armstrong stayed when he played in Charlotte.
Two churches remain as a reminder of the neighborhood's black
heritage. The Neoclassical style Old Little Rock A.M.E. Zion
church stands at Seventh and North Myers. Its membership
when the building was erected in 1911 was primarily black
working-class. Further up East Seventh at North College is the
Victorian Gothic First United Presbyterian church. Dating
from 1893, it "was the church of professional black residents of
First Ward," according to Greenwood. 47

Little Rock A. M. E. Zion Church
While the heart of First Ward seems to have been working-class
black and white, the fine residences of middle and upper-class
whites lined the major streets closest to the Square. A good
middle-class example is the William Treloar double house, built
for a local businessman in the late 1880s at the corner of Brevard
and Seventh. 48 The grandest mansions of the day were
first on Trade, Tryon and College Streets, then on McDowell at the
turn of the century when the edge of town was becoming the new
fashionable location. Only two of these upper-class residences
remain in the ward today. The recently renovated J. P. Carr house at 200 North
McDowell is one of the city's finest Queen Anne style homes, once
part of several blocks of similar dwellings built on the street at
the turn of the century as the city went through a boom period.
49 Not far away at 923 Elizabeth Avenue, the point where
East Trade changes its name to Elizabeth, was the grand,
white-columned Neoclassical F.
O. Hawley house. 50 It is the last of the
mansions that once lined Trade and Tryon to remain in the Center
City. A former First Ward mansion can be seen today in the Plaza
Midwood neighborhood at 1600 The Plaza, the 1890 J. W. Miller
residence that was moved from North Tryon Street to the fashionable
suburbs in 1915. 51
First Ward's leading churches faced Trade and Tryon side by side
with the homes of their wealthier congregants. Two well-preserved
examples remain, both Neoclassical designs by architect J. M.
McMichael. One is the East Avenue Tabernacle across from the Hawley
house, the other is (Old) First Baptist, now Spirit Square, at 318
North Tryon.
Trade and Tryon were also the major business streets. First Ward
commercial landmarks include the 1939 Woolworth building at 112
North Tryon, the city's finest Art Deco storefront,
and the 1927 Carolina
Theatre, the area's only remaining "movie palace."

Carolina Theater, 1946
At 516 North Tryon stands the former Hovis Mortuary, a William
Peeps design that is a rare example of use of the Tudor Revival
style for a commercial structure. 52 Walking from the
Square down East Trade one passes the ornately sculptured Belk
facade at 115, the 1871-72 Italianate style Merchants and Farmers Bank
building at 123, which is today the city's oldest surviving
commercial structure, and architect William Peeps' sky-lit Court
Arcade at 725 across from the old County Courthouse.
53
Also of importance on East Trade, though less imposing, is a
cluster of two and three story brick buildings at Trade and
Brevard. The area, previously residential, was redeveloped for
commercial use around 1910 when the city's second textile boom
pushed downtown expansion. Much of the property was assembled and
resold by the Mutual Trust Company with deeds stipulating, "Any
building erected on the lot shall be of brick, at least two stories
high, with sidewalls extending back at least thirty feet."
54 Perhaps the best building of the group is the 1915
Blair Building at 405 East Trade, with carefully detailed
cream-colored brickwork and an elegant bronze cornice of unusual
design. The group as a whole is more important than any single
building, however, because this is the last place that one can
experience a bit of the concentration of low-rise commercial
buildings that made up all of downtown Charlotte at the beginning
of this century.
The railroad between Brevard and College in First Ward is the
old Columbia and Charlotte, the city's first line. A number of
warehouse and factory buildings dating back to the early twentieth
century may still be seen along the track. The most notable is the
Philip Carey Warehouse
at 301 East Seventh, built in 1908-09 with fine Victorian
brickwork. 55 Another notable First Ward industrial
building, the Southern Bell Building, is not on the railroad. It
was built at 208 North Caldwell Street in 1929, and today despite
several later additions one can still see the exuberant Art Deco
stone carvings that decorate its facade.
Second Ward:
Second Ward was historically much less racially integrated than
First. Its land lies lower than that of the other three wards, a
health hazard in the years before indoor plumbing and storm sewers.
Early maps identify the area as "Logtown," indicating that it was
largely made up of rude homes. 56 With emancipation in
the 1860s, such an area of inexpensive housing was a logical
settlement area for the newly freed slaves that flocked to the
city.
Dr. Edward Perzel of the UNCC History Department has noted that
the ward regularly elected black city councilmen throughout most of
the late nineteenth century. 57 By 1917, when the first
known map of Charlotte's racial patterns was drawn, Second Ward was
solidly black except for Trade, Tryon, College, and parts of Fourth
Street. 58 About this time, evidently, the nickname
Logtown gave way to "Brooklyn" for reasons no longer
remembered.
Second Ward contained a broad spectrum of black residences and
businesses. At one extreme was Blue Heaven, a poorly drained hollow
crowded with shanties where Baxter Street now crosses McDowell. At
the other extreme were elegant houses along Brevard Street,
including that of J. T. Williams, a key business, medical, and
political leader who served as U. S. Consul to Sierra Leone, West
Africa, from 1898 to 1907, appointed by President McKinley.
59 The area also contained Myers Street School,
Charlotte's first black public school when it opened in 1882, and
Second Ward High School, the city's only black high school for many
decades. 60 Here, too, were the city's black YMCA and
black Carnegie Library, the first public library for blacks in
North Carolina. 6l There were many black businesses, led
by the A.M.E. Zion Publishing House, which did all printing for
that religion in America and issued the denomination's monthly
newspaper, making Charlotte an A.M.E. Zion center second in
importance only to New York City.
Almost all traces of this community were destroyed through urban
renewal clearance and private demolition in the 1960s, replaced by
Charlotte's Government Plaza, two hotel towers, some office
buildings, and a pair of automobile dealerships. Two black historic
landmarks do survive on Brevard Street. The 1902 Victorian Gothic
style Grace A.M.E. Zion
Church houses one of Charlotte's oldest black
congregations. 62 The Mecklenburg Investment Company
Building nearby was financed by a group of black
professionals in 1921 to provide the first office building open to
blacks. 63 The three story building, which had a third
floor lodgehall where many black civic groups met, features
handsome yellow and red patterned brickwork by black
builder-architect W. W. Smith.

Mecklenburg Investment Company Building
The homes of wealthy whites which once lined Trade, Tryon, and
part of College in Second Ward have fared no better. Not a single
mansion remains in the ward. St. Peters Catholic Church
still stands proudly at North Tryon and East First Street, though
it is no longer surrounded by houses as it was when it was built in
1893. On East Trade are City
Hall and the (Old) County Courthouse, both built in
the mid 1920s in the grand white-columned Neoclassical style.
64 They are set back from the street to form a grassy
"civic plaza" which owes much of its inspiration to the White City
of the 1893
Chicago World Columbian Exposition, but part also to the
fact that the buildings originally were part of a row of fine
residences with front lawns.

City Hall
A few Second Ward commercial landmarks may still be seen on
South Tryon Street. The 1926 Wilder Building at 237 South Tryon,
demolished in 1983, was a ten story Neoclassical skyscraper. It was
long the home of WBT, one of the most important early radio
stations and later television stations in the Southeast. At 342
South Tryon is architect C. C. Hook's 1913 Masonic Temple (demolished 1987)
with its enormous stone globes balanced on pylons flanking the
entrance, an outstanding example of Egyptian Revival style
architecture. 65 The 1942 Federal Reserve Bank (demolished
1997) at 401, a crisply detailed blend of Art Deco and Neoclassical
influences, was an important factor in Charlotte's growth after the
Second World War into a major banking center in the Southeast.
Ratcliffe Flowers
at 431, built in 1930 with a two story stuccoed Mediterranean
Revival facade and matching interior, has been called Charlotte's
finest piece of early twentieth century commercial architecture.
Nearby, off Tryon at College and Stonewall Streets, is downtown's
last relic of the horse and buggy days. The Query-Spivey- McGee Hardware and Feed
store building served as one of Charlotte's main livery stables
in its early years. 66

Masonic Temple
Third Ward:
What is now considered Third Ward is made up of two very separate
areas. The first is the original Third Ward bounded by Morehead
Street, Graham Street West, Trade and South Tryon. This area was
once a mixture of residential and commercial uses following a
pattern similar to that already seen in First Ward, though with
fewer black residents. After the Piedmont and Northern electric
railroad built its passenger and freight terminals near Fourth and
Mint behind the Post Office in the l910s, the area became the least
residential of the four wards, with warehousing and commercial uses
at its heart and industry on Graham Street along the Southern
Railway tracks. A few big houses remained into the 1950s, and a
large black residential pocket near Mint and Morehead until removed
by Urban Renewal programs in the 1970s.
A noteworthy building survived from the area's residential
years, and was one of the Center City's most important historic
landmarks until it was demolished. This is Good Samaritan Hospital
at 600 South Mint. When it was erected in 1888 by St. Peter's
Episcopal Church it was one of the first privately run hospital for
blacks in the United States. 67 Added onto many times,
it remained Charlotte's black hospital until the desegregation era
of the 1960s.
The Piedmont and Northern terminal and freight station that
transformed Third Ward have been demolished in recent years, though
some of the track and a wooden trestle remain. The major reminder
of Third Ward's history as a terminus for the electric interurban
railway is the large Duke Power office building of cream brick on
South Church Street between First and Second streets. J. B. Duke
first used the site for the main offices of his rail line, then
built the headquarters for Duke Power at the front of the lot in
1928. Also from the era is the 1924-1925 Charlotte Supply Building
(demolished) at West First and Mint streets where the P & N and
Southern tracks crossed. 68 It was a well preserved
warehouse building of the type that the railroads attracted to
Third Ward. The company was an important supplier of textile
machinery to the region.
As with the other Center City wards, the Trade and Tryon edges
of Third Ward were commercial. On West Trade was the Hotel
Charlotte, financed in 1924 by a group of businessmen who
wanted the city to have a grand meeting place. 69 They
hired leading New York City hotel architect William L. Stoddard who
created a ten story Neoclassical structure with elegant terra cotta
trim. A block further down West Trade is the massive U. S. Post
Office building with its long parade of limestone columns. Built in
1915, it was nearly tripled in size in 1934, displacing the old U.
S. Mint which had shared the site for nearly a century.
On South Tryon are Charlotte's two finest remaining Neoclassical
office skyscrapers; Louis Asbury's old First National Bank
of Charlotte building, recently renovated as One Tryon Center, and
W. L. Stoddard's Johnston
Building, also newly rehabilitated.

Johnston Building
Both date from the mid 1920s when Charlotte was at the crest of her
third textile boom. The street also has noteworthy low-rise
structures. The Southern Real Estate building, now Binacos of New
York, was originally the home of the company which had earlier
developed the Elizabeth neighborhood. 70 It has a
handsome Neoclassical facade designed by Louis Asbury, with white
glazed terra cotta framed by Ionic-capitaled pilasters. At the
corner of South Tryon and West Fourth is the old Charlotte National
Bank, a full-scale Roman temple with tall fluted columns
erected in 1918. 71 The work of New York City architect
Alfred C. Bossom, it is the city's, and perhaps the state's, finest
Neoclassical commercial structure and one of only two temple-form
banks in Mecklenburg County. Two blocks away is the Latta Arcade, home office of
Edward Dilworth Latta who developed the city's electric streetcar
system and its first suburb, Dilworth. Much of the facade of the
building was destroyed in a mid twentieth century remodeling, but
inside, the magnificent two story arcade space, lined with shops
and offices and lit by sunshine streaming through clerestory
windows and skylights, remains much as it was when it opened in
1914. 72

Latta Arcade
Third Ward is unique among Charlotte's Center City wards in that
it has retained a fair number of the store and office buildings
that once lined all blocks adjoining Trade and Tryon. The former
Industrial Loan and Investment Bank at 124 South Church is an
example. It is the county's second Greek temple bank, sporting a
delicately detailed stone and terra cotta facade believed to have
been designed in 1927-28 by either J. M. McMichael or Martin
Boyer.

Industrial Loan and Investment Bank
In the 200 and 300 blocks of South Church are the buildings of
Film Row. From the 1920s into the 1970s this group of two story
structures was the center of distribution for Hollywood movies for
the Carolinas. Every major motion picture company maintained
offices in the Row. The most architecturally noteworthy is the Art
Deco building shared by Loews and MGM. Built at 303 South Church in
1941, the design features metal frame windows, yellow brick, and
striking black glazed terra cotta trim.
The second section of Third Ward is the residential and
industrial area beyond Graham Street and the Southern Railway
tracks. This area remained undeveloped during much of the city's
early history. The first major structure in the area was the now
demolished Victor Cotton Mill, which opened in 1884 near the
present intersection of Clarkson and Westbrook streets.
73 About 1907 the Victor Mill company, by that time
known as Continental Manufacturing, 74 began to develop
its surplus land as a residential area called Woodlawn. Though the
area was within the 1907 boundaries of Third Ward and is today
thought of as a central city neighborhood, when it was built it was
considered a streetcar suburb, on the West Trade trolley line. A
1911 real estate advertisement boasted, "Woodlawn is the nearest
suburb to the business part of the city, yet NONE is prettier."
75
Like most Charlotte suburbs, Woodlawn was not built in a day.
The year 1907 saw platting of the area between West Trade, Irwin
Creek, South Clarkson, and what is now Fourth Street Extension.
76 These earliest streets included curving Woodlawn
Avenue, now renamed Irwin Avenue, Grove Street, West Fourth Street,
and part of Victoria Avenue, which was named for the mill.
77 In 1912-1913 Victoria Avenue was extended to its
present length, First, Elliot, McNinch, and what is now Greenleaf
were added, and the first house sites on Cedar were mapped.
78 What is today Waccamaw Court was added in 1928, and
the area's last street, Westbrook, was finally developed in 1939,
an early project of homebuilder John Crosland. 79
Woodlawn was somewhat more working-class than Charlotte's other
early suburbs. This was probably due to its proximity to the Victor
Mill and to the Southern Railway office building and yards on West
Trade Street. It was also close enough to downtown for residents of
modest means to walk when needed to save trolley fare. Though city
directories show a wide range of occupations represented among
early Woodlawn residents, a noticeable number listed the cotton
mills or the Southern Railway as their employer. The old Victor
Mill was demolished in the 1950s or 1960s, but the Southern Railway
office building survives. Through most of its existence Woodlawn
was exclusively white. Black residents did not move in until the
1960s when demolition elsewhere in the Center City forced them to
find new homes.
Except for the large but architecturally nondescript Southern
office building at 713 West Trade Street, no individual buildings
of special significance have been identified in this part of Third
Ward. The area does, however, contain one of Charlotte's notable
concentrations of early Bungalows. The small frame houses lining
Grove and West Fourth streets between Sycamore and Irwin create a
streetscape that today looks much as it did seventy years ago.
Fourth Ward:
Fourth Ward, like Third Ward, consists of an old section plus a new
development beyond the Southern Railway tracks. Unlike Third Ward,
however, the older area has remained largely residential to the
present day. To a greater extent than any other ward, buildings
from the area's residential past have been retained to the present.
Yet even here a vast majority of the pre-World War II buildings are
gone.
All four Center City wards originally had an equal share of the
city's grandest residences, which lined Trade and Tryon in the
early years and by the 1900s extended back to College and Church.
Beyond those grand avenues Fourth Ward seems to have had more than
its share of prosperous middle-class families, however, probably
because the land is the highest and best drained of the four wards.
About forty of these houses, out of several hundred that stood in
the neighborhood into the 1960s, have been retained as part of the
Fourth Ward Historic District.
A handful of these homes have been individually designated as
local Historic Properties. They include 326 West Eighth, remodeled in
the Queen Anne Victorian style about 1880 for school teacher and
Methodist minister Elias Overcarsh, 324 West Ninth Street which
was occupied for most of its existence by storekeeper E. W.
Berryhill, and 129 North Poplar Avenue, which was built
speculatively in 1895 and first owned by music store owner E. M.
Andrews. 80 Though today these dwellings seem to be fine
specimens of Victorian architecture, their owners were decidedly
middle-class, providing a tantalizing hint of what the dwellings of
the really well-to-do on Trade, Tryon and Church must have once
been like. A single top-notch Church Street residence does survive,
511 North
Church built in the 1890s for foundry operator Vinton
Liddell, one of the city's leading industrialists, and later
occupied by Charlotte mayor S. S. McNinch. 81 Its
rambling shingle-clad exterior is an elaborate blend of Queen Anne
and Shingle style influences, and its interior retains all of its
original elegant paneling, wainscoting, mantels, and stairs.

324 West Ninth Street - The Berryhill House
Along with Fourth Ward's late nineteenth century houses are a
few early twentieth century apartment buildings. The finest is the
1929 Poplar Apartments at
West Tenth and Poplar Street. 82 Its designer, the mill
engineering firm of Lockwood, Green Co., used the Old English
decorative motifs popular for single-family homes in the period,
creating an elegant structure that remained an elite address even
when much of the rest of the neighborhood became transient housing.
83
To go along with its residences, Fourth Ward had more than its
share of leading churches and other institutions. First and
foremost is First Presbyterian Church, occupying a full city
block on West Trade near Independence Square. It was for many
decades the religious center of this predominantly Presbyterian
city, with the village's main early graveyard on an adjoining
block. On North Tryon Street are the 1927 First United Methodist
Church by architect Edwin B. Phillips of Nashville, Tennessee,
the 1926 First Associated
Reform Presbyterian Church, and the 1893 St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, one of the city's finest remaining Victorian
structures, featuring Richardsonian brick and stone detailing.
84 St. Peter's Episcopal Church made Fourth Ward the
home not only of its sanctuary, but also of the hospital it built
in 1892. Old St. Peters
Hospital at 225-231 North Poplar, the city's first civilian
hospital, has recently found new life as residential condominiums.
85 A block away at 229 North Church stands the North Carolina Medical
College building, designed by J. M. McMichael in 1907.
86

North Carolina Medical College
As with the other Center City wards, Fourth Ward had stores and
offices on Trade and Tryon near the Square, and industries along
the railroad. Anchoring the Square was the 1907 Independence Building,
now demolished. Surviving commercial buildings include architect
William Peeps' 1920s Iveys Department Store, Louis Asbury's
1920s Mayfair Hotel,
and Asbury's 1920s Professional Building office tower, all on North
Tryon. Perhaps the most interesting commercial structure is
architect M. R. Marsh's seven story Builders Building at 314 West
Trade. It is built completely of fireproof materials, the vogue
when it went up in the late 1920s, and features a ground floor
arcade. It was intended to house the offices of all of Charlotte's
contractors and builders, in order to facilitate sharing of
technical information and hiring of subcontractors, part of a
nationwide movement for "builders exchanges" that had begun around
the turn of the century.
Probably the best known Fourth Ward industry today is Interstate
Milling Company. Founded by Myers Park businessman Charles Moody
early in the century, its sculptural grain elevators dominate the
city view from U. S. Interstate 277. 87 The most
historically important Fourth Ward factory is the old Charlotte
Cotton Mill, now part of Spiezman Industries at Fifth and Graham.
The present conglomeration of low brick buildings includes
Charlotte's very first successful cotton mill, dating from 1880,
the structure that kicked off Charlotte's New South Era and with it
Charlotte's transformation from a village to a major city.
88
Across the Southern Railway from the Charlotte Cotton Mill is
the newer part of Fourth Ward. Like the adjacent section of Third
Ward, this area was originally conceived as a streetcar suburb
early in the twentieth century. Until then the only things on that
side of the tracks were Elmwood Cemetery and its black counterpart
Pinewood Cemetery. The cemeteries date from the 1850s when the city
fathers decided to open a second municipal graveyard to replace the
crowded Settlers Cemetery behind First Presbyterian. The new burial
ground's winding drives and suburban location mark it as an example
of the "rural cemetery" movement that began with Boston's Mount
Auburn Cemetery in the 1830s, a forerunner of the city park
movement. 89 Today it holds the graves of most of
Charlotte's New South leaders, including the imposing mausoleums of
J. S. Myers and Edward Dilworth Latta.
About 1905 the Irwin family, who had long held the land between
the cemetery and Irwin Creek, decided to have it platted for house
lots. The resulting suburb, on the West Trade streetcar line, was
called Irwin Park. 90 It originally featured a large
park, today the site of Irwin School. As with Woodlawn, this
neighborhood was white until the 1960s. Most of the original houses
have been demolished in recent years, but some solid Bungalows
remain on Irwin Avenue and West Sixth Street near the school.
THE CENTER CITY
Notes
1 Charlotte News, August 11, 1982. Fifty percent
of the respondents to the survey, conducted by the Urban Institute
of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, went downtown
"few times a year" or "never."
2 Dannye Romine, Mecklenburg: a Bicentennial
Story (Charlotte: Independence Square Associates, 1975), pp.
13-14.
3 "Harris Map," 1855. Copy at Lawyers Title Company,
301 S. McDowell Street, Charlotte, North Carolina.
4 Dan L. Morrill, "J. P. Carr House: Survey and
Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1976).
5 Charlotte Daily Observer, March 13,
1907.
6 Charlotte Observer, October 16, 1976. See
also "Charlotte apportionment" vertical file at the Carolina Room
of the Charlotte Public Library. The at-large system resulted in
most public officials being elected from a small, wealthy area of
southeast Charlotte, a situation that some say contributed to the
government's callous attitude toward inner city neighborhood
interests. In 1977, after a fight led in part by neighborhood
groups, a district system was reinstated, though with different
boundaries than the old wards.
7 "Gray's New Map of Charlotte" (Philadelphia: O. W.
Gray and Son, 1882). Copies are in the collections of the Carolina
Room of the Charlotte Public Library and the Lawyers Title
Company.
8 For more on Charlotte's railroads see the section
of this report entitled, "The Growth of Charlotte: a History."
9 Charlotte Observer, February 20, 1927. By
1882 the house was the home of a Mrs. Young.
10 John Kellog, "The Formation of Black Residential
Areas in Lexington, Kentucky, 1865-1887, "The Journal of
Southern History, 48:1 (February, 1982), pp. 34-35.
11 Dan L. Morrill, "Myers Park Streetcar Waiting
Stations: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1980).
12 "Insurance Maps of Charlotte, North Carolina" (New
York: Sanborn Map Company, 1929), especially "Map of Congested
District," frontispiece of vol. 1.
13 The 1930 population was 82,675, according to a
recap of past census statistics in Charlotte Chamber of Commerce,
"1950 Census Data" (Charlotte: Chamber of Commerce, 1950).
14 Data on individual buildings in this section,
except where noted, came from the vertical files in the Carolina
Room of the Charlotte Public Library, city directories, title
searches of selected properties, the files of the Historic
Properties Commission, and LeGette Blythe and Charles R. Brockman,
Hornets' Nest: the Story of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County
(Charlotte: McNally of Charlotte, 1961). Janette Greenwood provided
much help in drawing this material together. Buildings for which
the Historic Properties Commission has prepared Survey and Research
Reports are indicated by footnotes.
15 Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Office, deed
book 224, p. 100; deed book 165, p. 663.
16 Miller's Official Charlotte, North Carolina,
City Directory (Asheville: The Miller Press, 1929), pp. 29-30.
By this time most Charlotte suburbs had public schools as well, led
by Central High in Elizabeth, the city's only white high school
(Central Piedmont Community College today).
17 Charles M. Strong, History of Mecklenburg
County Medicine (Charlotte: News Printing House, 1929), pp.
98-118. Mary Norton Kratt, Charlotte: Spirit of the New
South (Tulsa, Oklahoma: Continental Heritage, 1980), pp. 56,
64-66, 72, 116-119.
18 Dan L. Morrill and Ruth Little-Stokes,
"Architectural Analysis: Dilworth: Charlotte's Initial Streetcar
Suburb" (Charlotte: Dilworth Community Association, 1978), section
2, p. 9. Charlotte Observer, December 18, 1911; December 18,
1912; January 1, 1914.
19 Earle Sumner Draper, interview with Thomas W.
Hanchett, at Vero Beach, Florida, June 1982.
20 James W. Clay, ea., Atlas of Charlotte
Mecklenburg, 2nd ed. (Charlotte: Department of Geography and
Earth Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 1981),
p. 29.
21 Dan L. Morrill, "The Road that Split Charlotte,"
Charlotte Observer, May 2, 1982, "Parade" section, pp. 12,
15, 19.
22 "Shopping Centers" vertical file at the Carolina
Room of the Charlotte Public Library.
23 Mrs. A. V. Blankenship, interview with Thomas W.
Hanchett, at Charlotte, North Carolina, June 1982.
24 Charlotte Observer, October 28, 1959.
Charlotte News, October 27, 1959. See also, "Shopping
Centers" vertical file.
25 Charlotte Observer, October 23, 1947;
August 15, 1948.
26 Charlotte Observer, August 19, 1948;
December 30, 1948.
27 Charlotte Observer, November 17, 1949;
August 17, 1951.
28 Charlotte formed a major case study in William W.
Nash, Residential Rehabilitation: Private Profits and Public
Purposes (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., 1959), pp.
87-96. See also Charlotte Observer, August 10, 1949;
November 1, 1950; May 6, 1951. Featured in Saturday Evening
Post, March 1950, in House and Home the same year, and
lauded by the director of the Federal Urban Renewal program,
according to clippings in the "Slum Clearance 1948-57" file in the
Charlotte Observer-Charlotte News Library. After five years
of the program, 9,778 dwellings had been brought to code and only
1074 demolished.
29 Federal Urban Renewal began with the Housing Act
of 1949, "Redevelopment Commission of Charlotte, 1968-69 Annual
Report" (Charlotte: City of Charlotte, 1969).
30 Charlotte News, June 6, 1960.
31 "Statistical Summary of Urban Renewal Program:
October 1972" (Charlotte: Redevelopment Commission of the City of
Charlotte, 1972).
32 Ibid. Much of the housing indisputably needed
clearance. In the notorious "Blue Heaven" district "down from
Morehead and east of McDowell Street. . .the rows of close-packed
1920s shacks show that since that time it was meant to be a slum. .
.. 'Why did men build those houses?' (asked Fred Williams, head of
the old Brooklyn Community Health Council). 'They don't care who
lives there as long as they get money,'" Charlotte Observer,
December 26, 1965.
However, the renewal process was detrimental for Brooklyn
residents who owned property and for absentee owners who did care.
It was nearly a decade between the time that clearance was first
proposed in the early 1950s and the time that demolition began.
Owners no longer had reason to spend money on maintenance, and at
the same time it was almost impossible to sell and go elsewhere.
Critics eventually came to call this deterioration process
"planners' blight," Charlotte Observer, January 19, 1960;
April 15, 1965; January 19, 1971.
33 Charlotte Observer, December 28, 1965;
November 21, 1970.
34 Charlotte News, December 7, 1965.
35 Charlotte News, July 27, 1973; December 15,
1975. See also "Statistical Summary of Urban Renewal Program. . .."
Center City neighborhoods were not the only ones hit by Urban
Renewal. The Greenville section north of Fourth Ward was leveled
and replaced with suburban Ranch style houses in the early 1970s,
and a small portion of Dilworth between South Boulevard and Euclid
Avenue was bulldozed for elderly housing at about the same
time.
36 Charlotte Observer, November 21, 1970;
April 15, 1973; December 10, 1975. Charlotte News, March 20,
1975; February 23, 1979; May 11, 1979.
37 Charlotte News, July 9, 1973; December 7,
1973. See also "Statistical Summary of Urban Renewal Program. .
.."
38 A good example is the old H. M. Wade mill village
built early in this century in Third Ward. It was held in trust by
a consortium of banks by 1966 when the News reported that
the banks "demolished 86 houses last year, and the banks decided
they did not want to invest money in improving the others. . .. The
property is administered by . . .NCNB, First Union, and Wachovia. .
.. The houses are on West Morehead Street, Dunbar Street, Mint
Street, Stonewall Terrace, South Graham Street, West Hill Street,
Lomax Lane, Emerald Lane, Bellinger Lane, Eldridge Street and
Morris Street," Charlotte News, March 4, 1966. In 1983 these
areas remain largely vacant. Other examples abound: Fourth Ward
mansions on Ninth and Tenth streets demolished by owner Jones-Brown
Realty, Charlotte Observer, May 24, 1969; more Fourth Ward
demolition, Charlotte Observer, January 29, 1971; fourteen
houses in First Ward demolished by owner Lee Kinney, Charlotte
Observer, March 30, 1972.
39 Stephen B. Griffin, "Fourth Ward Redevelopment: A
Case Study of Issue Expansion" (M.A. paper, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1979), especially pp. 3-7, 18-24, 44,
47.
40 United States Bureau of the Census, Twentieth
Census: 1980, preliminary statistics.
41 See the listing of total population and population
by ward for each decade since 1950 in Charlotte Chamber of
Commerce, "1950 Census Data."
42 Charlotte Observer, February 20, 1927.
43 William H. Huffman, "J. B. Galloway House: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1982).
44 Dan L. Morrill, "Advent Christian Church: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1978).
45 Unpublished mapping of city directory data for
1897-98, 1916, 1926, 1936, 1946, and 1952 by Janette Thomas
Greenwood for the Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic Properties
Commission.
46 Aurelia Tate Henderson, interview with Janette
Thomas Greenwood, at Charlotte, North Carolina, March, 1982.
47 Janette Thomas Greenwood, "A Brief Sketch of First
Ward" (unpublished paper in the files of the Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1982).
48 William H. Huffman, "William Treloar House: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1983).
49 Dan L. Morrill, "J. P. Carr House: Survey and
Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1976).
50 William H. Huffman, "F. O. Hawley House: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1983).
51 "Victoria: National Register of Historic Places
Inventory Nomination Form," 1972, on file at the Division of
Archives and History, Raleigh, North Carolina.
52. William H. Peeps, A.I.A., Architect,
Charlotte, North Carolina, 1928 (Charlotte: News Printing House,
1928).
53 Janette Thomas Greenwood, "Merchants and Farmers
Bank Building: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1983). The Commission
also has files on the Belk facade and the Court Arcade.
54 Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Office, deed
book 312, p. 646. Title search courtesy of Janette Thomas
Greenwood.
55 William H. Huffman, "Philip Carey Building: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1983).
56 Butler and Spratt, Map of Charlotte Township. .
.1892. Copies are in the collections of the Mint Museum of History
and the City of Charlotte Historic Districts Commission. The map
shows a "Logtown Road" leading into Second Ward from the south. See
also Inez Moore Parker, The Biddle-Johnson C. Smith University
Story (Charlotte: Charlotte Publishing, 1975), p. 5.
57 Edward S. Perzel, interview with Thomas W.
Hanchett, at Charlotte, North Carolina, October 1982.
58 John Nolen, "Civic Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina: Report to the Chamber of Commerce" (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: typescript, 1917), oversize handcolored map. The
only known copy of this document is in John Nolen's papers,
collection #2903, in the collection of the Department of
Manuscripts and Archives, Cornell University Libraries, Ithaca, New
York.
59 William H. Huffman, "Grace A. M. E. Zion Church:
Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1980).
60 Harry P. Harding, "The Charlotte City Schools"
(Charlotte: typescript by Charlotte Mecklenburg School System,
1966), pp. 4-5, 11a, 12-13, 65, 70-72. See also pp. 124-125, 134,
139, 148 for more on black schools. A photocopy of this report is
in the Carolina Room of the Charlotte Public Library.
61 Claudia Roberts, "A Brief History of Durham, North
Carolina," 1983 (page proofs in the files of the Division of
Archives and History, Raleigh, North Carolina).
62 Huffman, "Grace A. M. E. Zion. . ."
63 William H. Huffman, "The M. I. C. Building: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1981).
64 Dan L. Morrill, "Mecklenburg County Courthouse:
Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1977). Dan L. Morrill, "Charlotte
City Hall: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1980).
65 Dan L. Morrill, "Masonic Temple: Survey and
Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1980).
66 William H. Huffman, "Query-Spivey-McGee Building:
Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1983).
67 Charlotte News, June 25, 1936, and other
materials in the "Good Samaritan Hospital" vertical file at the
Carolina Room of the Charlotte Public Library.
68 William H. Huffman, "Charlotte Supply Company
Building: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1983).
69 Edward S. Perzel, "Hotel Charlotte: National
Register of Historic Places Nomination Form," 1975, on file at the
North Carolina Division of Archives and History, Raleigh, North
Carolina.
70 William H. Huffman, "Southern Real Estate
Building: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1983).
71 Charlotte News, August 20, 1919.
72 Robert Tompkins and Mary Alice Hinson, "Latta
Arcade: National Register of Historic Places, Inventory-Nomination
Form," 1975, on file at the North Carolina Division of Archives and
History, Raleigh, North Carolina.
73 Dan L. Morrill, "A Survey of Cotton Mills in
Charlotte, North Carolina. . ." (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1979).
74 Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Office, deed
book 224, 100; map book 230, p. 9.
75 Charlotte Observer, October 10, 1911.
76 Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Office, deed
book 224, p. 100; map book 230, p. 9.
77 Ibid.
78 Ibid., Map Book 230, pp. 234, 239.
79 Ibid., Deed Book 332, p. 189; Deed Book 772, p.
579; Deed Book 967, p. 571.
80 Dan L. Morrill, "Overcarsh House: Survey and
Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1976). Dan L. Morrill, "Berryhill House:
Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1976). Dan L. Morrill,
"Bagley-Mullen House: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte:
Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1975?).
81 Patsy S. Kinney, "Liddell-McNinch House: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1975).
82 William H. Huffman, "Poplar Apartments: Survey and
Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1983).
83 Charlotte Observer, May 1, 1983.
84 Blythe and Brockelman, p. 202. Charlotte Weekly
Uptown, May 5, 1981. Charlotte Observer, March 11,
1928.
85 Dan L. Morrill, "St. Peter's Episcopal Church:
Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg
Historic Properties Commission, 1977).
86 Dan L. Morrill, "North Carolina Medical College
Building: Survey and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1979).
87 William H. Huffman, "Charles Moody House: Survey
and Research Report" (Charlotte: Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission, 1981).
88 Morrill, "A Survey of Cotton Mills. . ."
89 Cynthia Zaitzevsky, Frederick Law Olmsted and
the Boston Park System (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap
Press of the Harvard University Press, 1982), pp. 16-17.
90 Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Office, deed
book 165, p. 663; map book 3, p. 47.
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