Rabu, 28 April 2010

Mystery Photo - 04.29.10


"East-West Expressway, 01.05.67"

(For those who may wonder, I can't make out the street name on the obelisk, the signs on the houses say only "have a pepsi" (left) and "snack bar" (right).)

(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)

Update:

Here is the blow-up of the obelisk - I can't make it out, but perhaps someone out there can interpolate:

Minggu, 25 April 2010

WALLTOWN SCHOOL


Walltown School, looking southeast from West Club Blvd., 1953
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)

Per the historic inventory, the Walltown Graded School was built in 1919 per the design of Durham architectural firm Linthicum and Linthicum on the corner of North Road (West Club Blvd.) and 3rd Street (Onslow St.) One of Durham's Rosenwald funded schools, the building provided a school facility for the African-American children of the Walltown neighborhood.

However, the location of the "Colored" West Durham Graded School prior to that time (1910s) is a bit of a mystery to me. It was a county school, location unlisted, and it disappears when Walltown School comes into existence. A Cora Truman was principal of the graded school, and a Cora Russell the principal of the Walltown School. It could be a different person, but also could be a principal who married in the interim. This is distinct from the white West Durham Graded School Nos 1 and 2, as well as the West End (Fitzgerald) School, which was a city school.

The school was expanded with a brick veneered concrete block wing in 1945, as seen to the right above. In 1955, the original frame building was demolished and replaced with a brick/CMU structure.

The desegregation of Durham's schools started slowly in 1959, with a handful of children from Walltown assigned to Brogden rather than Walltown School. The 'reverse segregation' - white kids attending the formerly-African-American schools, did not occur until 1970, when Walltown was integrated.

It's unclear when exactly the school closed; the school property was transferred to the county government in 1994. In 1997, the county put the property out for upset bid as surplus property. Some attempt was made by the neighborhood and city to acquire the property for conversion to a senior housing facility. It was acquired by St. James Baptist Church for $374,240. With the assistance of Self-Help and Duke, they transformed the former school building into the St. James Family Life Center.


Former Walltown School, 04.25.10


Find this spot on a Google Map.


36.016787,-78.91378

Senin, 12 April 2010

DURHAM STATION / FREIGHT & CAR TRAIN DEPOT


Original 1854 NC railroad survey, showing the future location of Durham's Station
(Courtesy David Southern/Steve Rankin)

As most folks are aware, Durham's raison d'etre came with the North Carolina railroad in 1854, and the desire to establish a train depot between Hillsborough and Raleigh. I've written previously about Mr. Pratt's high price / fear for his horses (arguably making him the first in a very long line of recalcitrant Durham-area landowners with an overly optimistic view of the value of their land/suspect improvements theron) that led the NCRR to seek out Dr. Bartlett Durham for land upon which to locate their depot.


Blount's map of Durham in 1865 - #10 is the railroad depot
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection. Scanned by Digital Durham)

Durham's early passenger service has always been a bit of a mystery to me. The Southern Depot, located north of the railroad tracks and just west of Corcoran St., clearly provided passenger service by the 1890s, and it appears that the Seaboard Station, located at Dillard St., did the same. (Both prior to the establishment of Union Station in 1905.) But I can only assume that passenger and freight were handled out of the same Durham Station Depot in the early decades; Hiram Paul describes only one passenger service station in his 1884 history, and he describes it thusly, reproduced with its original cringe-worthy elements of antiquity intact:

"Railroad facilities are hardly adequate, only one train a day each way being allowed by the liberal policy of the Richmond and Danville system. The depot is a reproach, there being no reception room for either ladies or gentlemen, and the apartment used as such, and adjoining the ticket office, being so filthy an[d] offensive that ladies never apply for tickets, except in cases of absolute necessity. It is about 12x14 feet, and is used almost continuously by negro section hands as a kitchen and sleeping quarters. The walls are black with soot and grease, and the floor is caked with grease and dirt. It is just to add, that the managers are perhaps not aware of the real condition of things. It is to be hoped, however, that the importance of the city will arouse this mammoth monopoly from its complacent lethargy, and that decent facilities at least will soon been afforded."

By 1905, passenger service was provided out of Union Station. Several other freight depots would be constructed along the main line and the belt line; the original depot site became the site of the Southern and D&S Freight Depot by the 1890s, and would remain such through the 1920s.


Bird's Eye view showing the freight depot on the original Durham Station site, 1920s.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection)


Bird's Eye view showing the freight depot on the original Durham Station site, 1924.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection)

Note how this depot sits to the north of the front facade of the Bull Building at American Tobacco - abutting the railroad tracks and sitting on top of present-day West Pettigrew St.

Between 1924 and 1937, the depot buildings between Vivian and the railroad tracks were demolished. Pettigrew Street was opened between Blackwell and McMannen (Mangum) Sts, and a new series of freight depots were constructed fronting Pettigrew St. A new, block long freight depot was built between McMannen and Pine St. (its eastern terminus a handsome neoclassical office building that was unnecessarily demolished for vacant land when our Ivory Tower of Incarceration was built in 1993.) Between McMannen and Blackwell, an auto unloading platform was built. Both were constructed by the Southern Railway Company.

The auto platform became a bit of a curious anachronism - built in recognition of the new exploding popularity of the automobile, and the number of cars that would need to be freighted into Durham to meet that need - but without the foresight that truck transport would quickly supplant train transport to bring these vehicles to Durham. This building is rarely referenced, but a 1953 newspaper article notes that the auto unloading platform was "[then] seldom used" and that the enclosed portion of the building had been rented out for storage for some time. (However, if anyone was curious why this platform was designed the way it was - long and skinny, with a sloping grade down to street level, you can picture the idea of cars being driven off of it.)

Likely from the 1930s or 40s onward, this building was used as a warehouse structure.

It's not really specific to the building, but the corner in front of the platform (at McMannen and Pettigrew) was sometimes referred to as "buzzard's roost" by the African-American community - a spot for day laborers to get work. Billy Barnes termed it as such in his 1966 photo, below. Interestingly, this term was also sometimes used by the community for the segregated balcony at the Carolina Theater.


Looking south from McMannen and the railroad tracks. The Austin-Heaton flour mill is in the background.
(Billy Barnes Collection, North Carolina Collection, UNC)

After the demolition of Union Station in 1968, the Southern freight depot in 1993, what I believe to have been the remnants of the Seaboard Airline station in 2007, the auto platform remained the last early 20th century vestige of the train industry in downtown Durham - interestingly, at the train industry's first location in Durham.


Auto platform, 02.10.08


Auto platform, 03.23.08

I don't know much about the details worked out between Capitol Broadcasting, the city, and the NCRR that allowed the auto platform to be demolished - the railroad, as is clear from the trackage visible in the historic pictures owns/owned the land southward to and including Vivian St. Regardless, the depot was demolished in September 2008.


09.11.08

I admit that I felt rather ambivalent about the demolition; it was always a fairly ugly building, in my opinion, and I appreciated the desire to open up the vista to the DPAC. I felt less ambivalent when they started to remove the roof and I saw the steel truss structure underneath - I thought the naked steel truss structure and platform - devoid of roof and concrete block, actually would have made for a very cool public space, with enough transparency to show the buildings beyond, but enough architectural character and structure to make for a neat gathering spot and tie-in to our railroad history.

Not to be. So the land is green space, which I can say is at least more attractive than the concrete block, piles of storage and padlocked chainlink that fronted West Pettigrew St. for so long, and asphalt space, our thirst for which remains ever unquenched.


Durham Station / Freight Station / Auto Platform site, 04.11.10

Long term, the plan from Capitol at one point involved new construction on this site; my guess would be that that would be on the far back burner at this point, but I'm not privy to their plans - since Diamond View III, the planned next step for Capitol, seems to be moving forward, the question as to what comes after DVIII is in the air.

A personal hope would be that some organization gathers adequate funds to make a Durham Museum a part of the site with Capitol - or perhaps something more train-specific. It remains a shame that the core of Durham - Dr. Durham's house and the first train depot, split by the NC RR, are vacant parking lot/grassy space, with no sense or acknowledgement of the importance that land played in the genesis of the city.

Find this spot on a Google Map.


35.994254,-78.902097

Minggu, 11 April 2010

WRIGHT FACTORY / FIRST GRADED SCHOOL


Wright Factory repurposed as Durham's first Graded School, 1880s.
(Courtesy Duke RBMC - Wyatt Dixon Collection)

Richard H. Wright has made multiple previous appearances on Endangered Durham - with reference to his involvement with Duke of Durham, Lakewood Amusement Park via Durham Traction Company, the Wright Corner, the Wright Machinery Company, the Wright Refuge for orphaned children, his tenure in the former EJ Parrish House on Dillard St., and his own country home Bonnie Brae.

Before any of those endeavors, Wright came to Durham to be a tobacco manufacturer. Born in 1851 in Franklin County, Wright ran a small general store and opened his first tobacco factory in Durham in the late 1870s. He began accumulating real estate during this time, which he would later subdivide for development via his Durham Consolidated Land and Improvement Company. When Washington Duke decided to retire in 1880, Wright purchased his share of the Duke and Sons Tobacco Company by mortgaging his real estate holdings to Washington Duke.

Thus engaged with the Duke Tobacco Company, Wright's former manufactory was no longer in use; when the battle in Durham over whether or not to establish a graded school system finally resulted in the affirmative in 1882, Wright's former factory seemed a viable candidate to house the school. During the summer of 1882, the Wright Factory was leased by the newly former Board of Education and remodeled as a school. (The first graded school for African-American children was established in 1885 in the Primitive Baptist Church on Fayetteville St.)

The building served as the graded school for white children until 1892 , when the first school building erected expressly for that purpose was built at the corner of Carr and Jackson Sts.

The Wright factory was demolished soon after the departure of the school - between 1892 and 1893, when Cigarette St. (which ran along the east side of the Old Cigarette Factory - then quite new) was extended northward across Main St. to Morris St. It was soon closed again with the expansion of the railroad sidings between the Globe Warehouse/Norfolk & Western Depot and the soon-to-be-built O'Brien Warehouse

Wright, as noted above and previously, would go on to many other business endeavors (his relationship with the Duke Company ended in 1885 in an acrimonious/litigious split.)


Site of the Wright Factory, similar vantage point to 1880s shot above, 04.11.10, with the O'Brien and Cobb buildings in the background.

Find this spot on a Google Map.


35.998376,-78.906146

Minggu, 04 April 2010

COBB AND O'BRIEN BUILDINGS


with the original Fire Station #2 between the buildings.


Looking northeast from Duke and Main Sts., 1890s. The tower of the Fire Station #2 is visible along West Main St. On either side, the stepped, projecting vent chimneys of Cobb and O'Brien are visible.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection)

The O'Brien building was built in 1898 and the Cobb building in 1899 as similar warehouse structures, modeled on the extant Walker Warehouse across West Main St. The Cobb building, much like the Walker Warehouse, was originally a single story structure.

In the early 1920s, the internal wood post-and-beam structure of the Cobb building was disassembled and replaced with an internal steel structural system; three floors were added atop the original first floor. Interestingly, the original wood structural post-and-beam system from the first floor was reassembled on the fourth floor as its structural system.

Architects for the renovation of the building noted a curiosity about this replacement steel structural system - that it is rotated ~7 degrees from square to the exterior walls of the building.

This view from the 1930s show the fire station tucked between the two warehouses located on the north side of Main street.

(Courtesy Durham County Library)

A partial view of both during shift change at L&M, 1930s.


(Courtesy Durham County Library)

Multiple additional changes were made to the building over the mid 20th century, including bridges across West Main and Morgan St., subterranean tunnels under Morgan St., a new steel structural system extending the full height of the northern portion of the building to support the a chiller system on the roof, and exterior elevator shafts.

The O'Brien building remained a single-story structure. Both structures were used primarily as warehouse structures in the late 20th century, as tobacco operations waned and Liggett eventually decamped in ~2001. They briefly considered renovating the remaining buildings in the complex themselves before agreeing to sell them to the Blue Devil Ventures group in 2003.

Here is the site prior to West Village phase 2 renovations, 2006.


In 2009, Blue Devil Partners completed renovations to the 'Phase II' of West Village project, which included Cobb and O'Brien, the Old Cigarette Factory, the Walker Warehouse, and the old L&M office building. Although I haven't been in either Cobb or O'Brien since renovation, my understanding is that they are primarily residential.


O'Brien building, 11.07.09


Cobb building, 11.07.09

Find O'Brien on a Google Map.

Find Cobb on a Google Map.


35.998599,-78.906488



35.998995,-78.90705