The Agriculture Education Buildings At Long Creek
Elementary School And Huntersville Elementary School

The Agriculture Education Building at Huntersville Elementary School

The Agriculture Education Building at Long Creek Elementary School
This report was written on November 22, 1991
1. Name and location of the property: The property known as the
Agriculture Education Building at Long Creek Elementary School is located at
9213 Beatties Ford Road in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. The property
known as the Agriculture Education Building at Huntersville Elementary
School is located at 504 Gilead Road, Huntersville, Mecklenburg County,
North Carolina.
2. Name, address and telephone number of the present owner of the
properties: The owner of the properties is:
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education
Education Center, 701 East Second Street
Charlotte, North Carolina 28202
Telephone: (704) 379-7000
Long Creek Elementary School Tax Parcel Number: 023-063-11
Huntersville Elementary School Tax Parcel Number: 017-121-13
3. Representative photographs of the property: This report
contains representative photographs of the property.
4. A map depicting the location of the property: This report
contains maps which depict the location of the property.

5. Current Deed Book Reference to the property: The most recent
deed to the Huntersville Elementary School Tax Parcel Number 017-121-13 is
listed in Mecklenburg County Deed Book 1653 at page 91. The most recent deed
to the Long Creek Elementary School Tax Parcel Number 023-063-11 is not
listed in the tax record.
6. A brief historical sketch of the property: This report contains
a brief historical sketch of the property prepared by Ms. Paula M. Stathakis.
7. A brief architectural description of the property: This report
contains a brief architectural description of the property prepared by Ms.
Nora M. Black.
8. Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets criteria
for designation set forth in N.C.G.S. 160A-400.5:
a. Special significance in terms of its history, architecture, and
/or cultural importance: The Commission judges that the properties
known as the Agriculture Education Buildings at Long Creek Elementary
School and Huntersville Elementary School do possess special significance
in terms of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. The Commission bases its
judgment on the following considerations: 1) the Agriculture Education
Buildings were constructed in 1938; 2) most early Mecklenburg County
residents were engaged in agriculture as a livelihood; 3) the Agriculture
Education Buildings housed vocation courses to provide a practical
education about crops, livestock and home manufacture for young men of
high school age; 4) the Agriculture Education Buildings are
architecturally significant as examples of buildings funded by the Public
Works Administration (PWA) as part of the "New Deal" era to spur economic
recovery; 5) the buildings still house modern day students providing
valuable classroom space; and 6) the Agriculture Education Buildings
provide the last link on each campus to an earlier school system before
school consolidation and grade separation by school in Mecklenburg County.
b. Integrity of design, workmanship materials, feeling, and/or
association: The Commission contends that the architectural
description by Ms. Nora M. Black included in this report demonstrates that
the Agriculture Education Buildings at Long Creek Elementary School and
Huntersville Elementary School meet this criterion.
9. Ad Valorem Tax Appraisal: The Commission is aware that
designation would allow the owner to apply for an automatic deferral of 50%
of the Ad Valorem taxes on all or any portion of the property which becomes
a designated "historic landmark." Both of these buildings, however, are
tax-exempt. The current appraised value of the Long Creek Agriculture
Education Building (improvement only) is $58,380. The current appraised
value of the Huntersville Agriculture Education Building (improvement only)
is $84,280. The Long Creek Elementary School property is zoned RI 5. The
Huntersville Elementary School property is zoned RS.
Date of Preparation of this Report: November 22, 1991
Prepared by:
Dr. Dan L. Morrill
in conjunction with
Ms. Nora M. Black
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission
1225 South Caldwell Street, Box D
Charlotte, North Carolina 28203
Telephone: 704/376-9115
Agriculture Education Buildings:
Huntersville Elementary School and Long Creek Elementary School
by
P.M. Stathakis
The Agricultural Education buildings ("Ag" buildings) at Huntersville and
Long Creek Elementary Schools were both built in 1938. 1 The
construction of these buildings was apparently funded by the Public Works
Administration (PWA), a component of the National Industrial Recovery
Administration (NIRA), one of the New Deal agencies created by Franklin
Delano Roosevelt during the first "One Hundred Days" of his first
presidential term.2 Plans for the building at Long Creek
Elementary are available at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Physical
Facility; the plans for the Huntersville building are lost.
The "Ag" Building at Long Creek Elementary is one of the oldest
structures on campus. It is pre-dated only by the Boiler Room (1923) and the
Gymnasium (1932). The "Ag" Building cost $11,000.00 to build. The
Agriculture Education Building at Huntersville Elementary is the oldest
extant building on its campus, a site which has been home to the
Huntersville High School Academy, Huntersville High School and Huntersville
Elementary School. Both of these "Ag" Buildings, now located at elementary
schools, were originally part of high school campuses.
The high school for Huntersville moved from its original site to the
North Mecklenburg High School campus in 1950. Up until that time, classes in
agriculture and shop were taught in the old "Ag" Building by Arthur Meachum.
Orland Gabriel taught agriculture and shop classes at Long Creek High School
until 1951 when the high school was also moved to North Mecklenburg High
School.
Vocational and Agricultural courses were introduced into the high school
curriculum in the late 1920s. The students who took these courses were from
rural families; many of them were from farm families. Former instructor
Orland Gabriel believes that 85%-90% of the boys at Long Creek High School
enrolled in his classes. These classes were optional; however, the
consistently high enrollment suggests that these courses were not merely
popular but necessary.4
In Agriculture classes, boys learned about field crops, and animal
husbandry. Their education took advantage of the new technology available to
farmers, particularly in horticulture and farm machinery. The students
learned which variety of staple crop grew best in this region and what kind
of mechanized equipment could help them farm efficiently. They also learned
about the breeding, growth, and feeding of livestock. For the classroom
segment of agriculture and shop classes, text book sets were available on
field crops, animal industry, and shop projects.5
Part of the "Ag" students' education took place outside of the classroom.
The boys frequently went on field trips to neighboring farms to assist
farmers with dehorning cattle, canonizing chickens, castrating cattle,
swine, and sheep, and docking sheep. Cattle were dehorned to protect the
herd and the farmer from being gored; the horns were removed with a large
pair of pincers. Sheep had to have their tails shortened, or docked, for
sanitary purposes. No anesthetics were used on the animals for these
procedures; anesthesia was performed only by veterinarians, and the animals
seemed to recover from these ordeals within thirty minutes. The students did
have to catch the animals, and tie them up to prevent their escape and the
likelihood of injury to those on the verge of removing various body parts
from the captive livestock. Mrs. Orland Gabriel recalls that her husband
often came home from these outings with his overalls and face covered with
blood from a dehorning exercise.
In shop, boys learned to make such practical items as bookcases, corner
cabinets, kitchen cabinets, and "whatnots" (small wall shelves used to
display household items). Larger community-oriented projects included calf
shelters for dairy farmers, and picnic tables. Most of the instruction in
shop revolved around wood working, but the boys learned some metal work as
well. Welding was a useful skill to know, and students often repaired items
that required welding for area farmers or from their own homes in the school
shops.
During the depression, the Long Creek "Ag" students ran a cannery as part
of the curriculum for practical education and as a service to the
surrounding community. The canning was not done in the "Ag" Building.
Individuals who used the canning facilities at Long Creek High School paid a
small fee to cover the expenses of cans and coal.8
The purpose of the vocation courses taught in the Ag buildings was to
provide a practical education about crops, livestock, and home manufacture
for young men who grew up in agricultural communities and who would probably
inherit and work the family farm. The scientific management of domestic
occupations was popular in the modern school curriculum, and such classes
were not restricted to young men. The practical education for females, Home
Economics, taught girls how to effectively run the household just as
Agricultural and Industrial classes taught boys how to run a farm. Both of
these curricula were aimed at self-sufficiency.9
The students involved in these classes not only learned skills that would
help them as farmers; they also made regular contributions of their skills
to the surrounding area. Their field trips, repair services, and large
woodshop construction projects gave them practical experience, and at the
same time assisted farmers who needed extra hands at critical times of the
year to take care of livestock or crops. Agricultural education was offered
in Mecklenburg County through the late 1970s.10
Both buildings have been in continuous use, even though Agriculture and
Shop classes are no longer taught on these campuses. Huntersville Elementary
uses the "Ag" Building as a Fine Arts Center. Long Creek uses its "Ag"
Building for Academically Gifted classes. Both schools also use their "Ag"
Buildings as centers for computer education, the practical curriculum of our
times.
1 Records of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, Bank Street
Physical Facility. The plans were drawn in 1934 for the building at Long
Creek. Interview with Charles Allison, 10-14-91.
2 The Public Works Administration was created to put people to
work on public buildings and in flood control.
3 Interview with Bill Presson, Principal of Huntersville
Elementary School and former Principal of Long Creek Elementary School.
4 Interview, Orland Gabriel. Mr. Gabriel was educated at North
Carolina State University.
5 Ibid.
6 Ibid. Less dramatic field exercises included pruning fruit
trees and digging irrigation terraces.
7 Ibid.
8 Bill Presson and Orland Gabriel.
9 By the 1920s, education was compulsory for everyone seven to
fourteen years old. Once an education was available to the masses, the
traditional university preparatory curriculum (Greek, Latin, mathematics,
literature, grammar, astronomy) was impractical for everyone. Education in
how to manage a farm or household became an important and necessary element
of the high school curriculum for those students who were not college bound.
See: Edgar T. Thompson, Agricultural Mecklenburg and Industrial
Charlotte: Social and Economic (Published by the Charlotte Chamber of
Commerce, 1926), p. 101,115.; Legette Blythe, "Flames Take Huntersville
Education Landmark" Charlotte Observer February 24, 1929, p. 9.
10 Orland Gabriel. After Long Creek High School was
consolidated into North Mecklenburg High School, the "Ag" students at North
Mecklenburg organized "Ag Day". This day was devoted mostly to displays of
farm machinery, and students from surrounding schools came to participate.
North Mecklenburg also sponsored Hog Killing Day on which a slaughtered hog
was brought to school and a representatives from a local abattoir came to
school to demonstrate how to butcher slaughtered animals.
Architectural Sketches: Agriculture
Education Buildings Located at Long Creek Elementary School and Huntersville
Elementary School
Prepared by:
Ms. Nora M. Black
The Agriculture Education Buildings, located at Long Creek Elementary
School and Huntersville Elementary School, are similar in appearance as well
as original function. Both buildings are constructed of brick and feature an
upper story set over a raised daylight basement. The windows have square
cornerblocks and sills of cast limestone. The exterior of each building is
belted between the daylight basement and the first floor with a soldier
course of brick. To provide ample light, all sides of both buildings are
pierced with large window openings to hold single, double, or triple sets of
6 / 6 double hung wooden sash. Each building has a low
hipped roof covered with asphalt composition shingles. The front entries
have small covered porches and double doors. Interiors of both Agriculture
Education Buildings are constructed with two classrooms on the first floor
and separate rest rooms for males and females on either side of the first
floor entry foyer. The daylight basement of each building contains two
classrooms, storage closets, and some physical plant space.
Long Creek Agriculture Education Building
The twenty-two acre campus of the Long Creek Elementary School is located
at 9213 Beatties Ford Road at the intersection of Midas Springs Road. The
Long Creek Agriculture Education Building is located on the southeast corner
of the campus; the east wall of the building is parallel with Beatties Ford
Road. The front of the Long Creek Agriculture Education Building, which
faces north, is five bays wide. The center bay is dominated by a small
hipped roof porch supported by white wooden piers set on a porch balustrade
of brick. The solid double doors are painted blue. A wooden half-ellipse
above the doors and all the building's trim are white. The fourteen concrete
steps leading to the porch landing have a white pipe railing. On the upper
story, there are four
windows; each is a 6/6 double hung wooden sash. The north facade of the
daylight basement has two windows. One is a six-pane fixed sash; the other
has an infill of wood with a center vent. A small brick room has been added
at ground level on the west side of the entry porch. This one story addition
houses a gas furnace. The access door is on the north side of the room; a
vent pipe emerges from the roof and snakes around the Agriculture Education
Building's overhang.
The east and west sides of the building are roughly identical. Both sides
are divided into three bays. The northern bay has a single window on each
level; the other two bays have groups of three windows on each level. On the
west side of the building, a single window air conditioning unit has been
installed in the top half of a window in the center bay. On the east side, a
window air conditioning unit has been installed in the rear or southernmost
bay on each level. The main difference seen in the sides is ground level. On
the eastern side of the building, ground level is two to three feet below
the window sills; ground level on the western side is at the cast stone
sills. The back (southern) facade of the building is dominated by two black
metal fire escapes with white pipe railings. Each fire escape begins at a
door on the upper level set in the center of two windows. Each door has a
transom light above. Directly below the doors on the upper level are doors
to the raised daylight basement classrooms. These doors also have transom
lights and are flanked by a single window. The two doors of the lower level
are set in a well with steps to reach ground level.
The interior of the upper level has the original hardwood floor in the
foyer. Carpet covers the hardwood floors in the classrooms. A dropped
ceiling has been installed to improve heating efficiency; the original
ceiling is still in place above. Five-panel wooden doors open from the foyer
into the classrooms. A narrow staircase leads from the first floor down to
the raised daylight basement level. The basement level has modern heating
vents installed along the exterior exposed brick walls. Round steel columns
support the floor above.
The Long Creek Agriculture Education Building has 4116 square feet
according to the tax card. It has no decorative lintels over any of the
windows; instead, the varied-colored face brick continues in
running bond. The cast stone cornerblocks are placed outside the frames
of the windows that they decorate. Each corner of the building has an
engaged brick pilaster in running bond. The deeply recessed mortar joints
lend shadow detail to the walls. The brick pilasters and the limestone
cornerblocks are the only decoration for this utilitarian building.
Huntersville Agriculture Education Building
The thirty acre campus of the Huntersville Elementary School is
located at 504 Gilead Road at the intersection of Sherwood Drive within the
city limits of Huntersville. The Huntersville Agriculture Education Building
is located on the east side of the campus; the front of the building faces
Gilead Road. The front, which faces south, is three bays wide. The center
bay is dominated by a large hipped roof porch supported by square white
wooden columns with slanting sides; wide staircases flank the porch. The
solid double doors are painted blue; the door surround has three sidelights
with a lower wooden panel on each side. All the building's trim is painted
white. The concrete steps leading to the porch landing have a pipe railing
painted white set behind the concrete coping of the brick balustrade. On the
upper story, there are two groups of windows; each group consists of three 6
/ 6 double hung wooden sash. The lower half of the windows has been painted
white; this provides privacy for the rest rooms in which the windows are
located. The south facade of the daylight basement has two windows. One is a
six-pane fixed sash; the other has an infill of brick that does not match
the rest of the building.
As with the Agriculture Education Building previously discussed, the east
and west sides of the building are roughly identical. The southernmost bays
on the first floor level have a single window. The upper level has two other
bays with a group of three windows as well as a triple window area that has
been covered with wood. The raised basement area has seven single 6/6 double
hung sash on each side of the building. The exception is the southernmost
window on the lower level of the west facade that has been replaced with a
vent for the furnace room. The smokestack for the furnace exits the basement
level near the vent and pierces the overhang of the building to rise above
the roof.
The window and door arrangement of the back (northern) facade of the
Huntersville Agriculture Education Building is asymmetrical. There is a
single black metal fire escape exiting the western classroom on the first
floor level; a metal awning extends over the landing. Two 6 / 6 double hung
sash help provide light to the western classroom. The first floor level also
has a group of three 6/6 double hung wooden sash providing light to the
eastern classroom. Doors to the raised daylight basement classrooms are also
covered with metal awnings. The westernmost door has a large awning that
also covers an area beside the door that has an infill of new brick. Three
small single windows are spaced unevenly between the two doors. The two
doors of the lower level exit the basement at ground level. Air conditioning
is provided to the classrooms by units located in windows on the north
facade.
The interior of the Agriculture Education Building has a dropped ceiling
to improve heating efficiency; the original ceiling is still in place above.
Five-panel wooden doors are found on both levels of the buildings as well as
flush doors for the storage closets. Windows and doors have surrounds of a
single board trimmed with a narrow piece of molding. The entire southern end
of the raised daylight basement level is separated from the classrooms by
horizontal board walls to provide rooms for the physical plant and storage
closets. The daylight basement level has interior walls of exposed brick and
round steel columns that support the floor above.
The Huntersville Agriculture Education Building has 4032 square feet
according to the tax card. The front door and all windows have lintels
constructed of a soldier course of brick. The corner blocks of the openings
are placed within the width of the door and window frames. The surface of
the building is constructed of varied-colored face brick laid in running
bond. Downspouts are placed randomly at corners of the building.
Conclusion
The Agriculture Education Buildings at Long Creek and Huntersville
provide a solid architectural link to the era of the yeoman farmer in
Mecklenburg County. The Neoclassical touches seen in these two utilitarian
buildings show strong ideas of tradition expressed in educational
facilities. Most of the original fabric is relatively unchanged and in very
good condition; that may be a simple result of the need for space to house a
growing student population. The importance of the two Agriculture Education
Buildings, however, is reflected in the fact that they are still serving as
functional, viable classrooms even after a revolution in Mecklenburg County
-- the revolution that swept citizens from cotton fields and hog killings to
computers and bank mergers.
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