Friday, September 29, 2006

BLACKNALL'S DRUGSTORE / STOKES HALL / THE GEER BUILDING

The northeast corner of Main and Corcoran Street has seen its share of building drama. For much of the 20th century, it was the location of one of the buildings on my Top Five list of How-Could-They-Have-Torn-That-Down buidings in Durham: the Geer building.

Before that, two buildings sat on the site of the later Geer Building: Blacknall's Drugstore was on thie corner, and Stokes Hall (the Opera House) sat immediately to its east.

(Courtesy Durham County Library)

Blacknall's Drugstore was established in 1873 by Richard Blacknall and his father.


Interior of Blacknall's Drugstore, 1900.
(Courtesy The Herald Sun)

Stokes' Hall, also known as the Opera House, was a performance venue and site of city council meetings prior to the construction of the Municipal Building / Academy of Music. The hall hosted theatrical performances, the Durham Choral Society, and early movies.


Looking east from Corcoran and West Main, circa 1900.
(Courtesy State Archives of North Carolina)

A dramatic fire in 1914 that broke out in the Brodie Duke Building (taller structure mid-block) destroyed much of the block (all except the easternmost two storefronts):


(Courtesy Durham County Library)






Destroyed structures, 1914.

A new building was constructed on the corner of Main and Corcoran Streets, modelled on a Florentine Palace. It was called the (Frederick) Geer Building, and designed by Alfred C. Bossom, British-born (and later member of Parliment) and nationally renowned for his bank designs. It appears to have been built as a business venture by Fred Geer, who was listed as president of the FC Geer Co., owners/operators of the Geer Building until his death in 1919.

Architectural Plans for the Geer Building.
(Courtesy Durham County Library)

Construction of the 5-story building, L-shaped, with the L at an obtuse angle to match the angle of Corcoran and West Main Sts., was completed in 1915.


The Geer Building, 1915
(Courtesy Durham County Library)

Fidelity Bank was the major tenant of the building. Fidelity was organized in 1887, capitalized with $50,000 by Washington Duke, Benjamin Duke, MA Angier, and George Watts. Fidelity was initially located in the Wright Building, diagonally across the intersection from this location. Presumably after the falling out between Wright and the Dukes/Watts, Fidelity moved to the Trust Building after it was completed in 1905. After the completion of the Geer Building, Fidelity became the anchor tenant, with the main branch and offices in the building.

Blacknall's Drugstore returned after the fire, located on the ground floor facing Corcoran, and remained a tenant until 1932, when it moved west on W. Main St. and became "Durham Drug Co." Woolworth's was located on the West Main St. ground floor of the building. The Geer Building helped form part of a corridor of signficant, sizable structures that straddled Corcoran Street. Multiple independent professionals (doctors, lawyers, accountants) had offices in the Geer Building.


Above, a view of the buildings lining Corcoran: the Geer Building, First National Bank building, the Durham Hosiery Mills buildings on the east side; the Croft Business School, and the roof of the old post office are visible on the west side. This was taken from the top of the Washington Duke Hotel; (all are gone except the First National Bank building) - late 1920s.
(Courtesy Durham Country Library)


A closer view.
(Courtesy Duke Archives)


Corcoran Street, looking south from close to Parrish Street. The old post office is on the right, the Geer Building, First National Bank Building, and Durham Hosiery Mills on the left.
(Courtesy Durham County Library)

It was a popular place for watching parades on Main Street. (Courtesy Duke Archives)


John Wily succeeded Benjamin Duke as president of the bank in 1922, and was succeeded by Jones Fuller in 1938. By 1939, Fidelity's offices has continued to expand, and they purchased the entire building, renaming it The Fidelity Bank Building. They later acquired the commercial structures immediately to the north of the building as well.

John Sprunt Hill was known to have been in keen competition with the Fidelity through the mid-20th century with his Durham Bank and Trust Company. In 1953, Fidelity was the largest bank in Durham, with $27,000,000 in assets; Durham Bank and Trust was second, with $22,932,000. Fidelity never expanded beyond Durham, with one branch in West Durham, one in East Durham, and one in north Durham.

In 1956, Fidelity Bank was acquired by Wachovia Bank of Winston-Salem, and absorbed under the Wachovia name.


Geer Building, known in the 1960s as the Wachovia Building - 02.20.61.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun)


Geer Building, 1971
(Courtesy Durham County Library)

Wachovia demolished the original home of Fidelity, the Wright Corner / Croft Business School building and built a new branch on that corner (the southwest corner of Main and Corcoran).

In 1972, the vast majority of the Geer Building (and the Nancy Grocery to its north) was demolished.


Looking south, 1972.
(Courtesy Herald-Sun)

Curiously, a not-so-large portion of the building remained - the part containing Woolworth's.

And you can see that they just chopped it off where they felt they needed to, leaving a chunk of the old arched doorway on the left side.


Vacant lot next to Woolworth's, 1990s. (Courtesy Durham County Library)

Woolworth's eventually donated the remainder of the Geer building to the city, which let it languish.
Fire ravaged the building next door (on the Parrish Street side) and caused additional water damage to the building. The city eventually stated that there was a "toxic mold" problem in the building, and asbestos, and that it needed to be torn down. It would be good if they read the CDC page about so-called toxic mold. And asbestos, well, that's pretty much in every old building. But the city had plans.


The bulldozers are back, 2001. Think they cleaned up the 'toxic mold' before they aerosolized billions of evil spores through demolition?
(Courtesy Herald-Sun)


Getting ready to take down the last remnants of the Geer building, 2001.
(Courtesy Herald-Sun)

To quote the Office of Economic Development website:

"Woolworth Site Redevelopment"

"$10 – 15 M – Woolworth Site Redevelopment — located on the site of one of the first civil rights sit-ins in the country, the historic building stood abandoned for a number of years, simultaneously growing a toxic mold problem coupled by the presence of asbestos. Noting the serious problems of the old building, the City of Durham financed the demolition and cleaning of the site. Next a call was issued for proposals on the redevelopment of the space, and a local development team was selected. OEWD is currently discussing a development agreement with this team for a signature 75,000 SF building at the historic Woolworth Site."

So, the last vestiges of the Geer Building were in the way of economic development, and the building was torn down. The coda to this saga is the city's attempt to expand this vacant area for their "signature building" by going after privately-owned 120 West Main Street with the demolition crew back in January. But that's a story for another post.


View of site of Geer Building, looking north on Corcoran, from similar vantage point to 1971 photo, 2006.


View of vacant Geer Building/Woolworth's site, 2006.

After this site was acquired by Greenfire Development, there has been much talk of their development of the "signature building" on this site. As of June, 2009, Greenfire released renderings showing what their proposed structure would look like - an improvement over previous iterations that would have demolished much of the remaining structures in the block.


Looking northeast from Corcoran and West Main.
(Courtesy Bob Bistry / Built Form Architecture)


Looking southeast from Corcoran between W. Parrish and E Chapel Hill.
(Courtesy Bob Bistry / Built Form Architecture)


Looking southeast at the 100 West Parrish St. storefronts from W. Parrish and Corcoran.
(Courtesy Bob Bistry / Built Form Architecture)

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35.995793,-78.901425

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

URBAN TOMBSTONES

While there are interesting, near-forgotten cemeteries tucked away in Durham, I am referring to the remnants of houses past. I've had a couple of questions/comments about research, and one part of that research is 'on the ground.' Looking at the urban landscape, you can often find clues demonstrating where houses were located, and the pattern of the earlier landscape.



When houses were large and destroyed in an iterative way (rather than a large clearance project like urban renewal) you can still see significant demarcation of where the houses were. In this view of the east side of the 300 block of Morris St., you can see the steps, as well as the small concrete property line 'retaining wall' with small 'posts' at the steps and the property lines. From this you can gauge the size and spacing of the houses on the street. So while I know of no pictures of these houses, I can begin to put together a mental picture of the landscape.

A more common finding in Durham is the curb cut without a house attached. If you are looking for them, some are fairly obvious as a driveway-to-nowhere:



Others are more subtle, as when the old granite curbs have been filled in with concrete at the curb cuts:



Foundation or retaining wall remnants are another clue to an old buildings site - such as this mostly buried section of curtain wall on a wooded lot downtown.



or this piece of a failing retaining wall of a vacant lot downtown





Plants and trees are another clue as to the location of ex-buildings. Bulbs, such as daffodils, are long lived and tend to come back each spring in the original planting patterns. Rose bushes on the edge of woods are a noticeable summer sign.
Patterns of old trees surrounding a former building site, often with younger, smaller trees in the middle (at the site of the former building) are another clue.

Monday, September 25, 2006

224 MORRIS

Sloan-Proctor House
Built: late 1910s
Demolished: 1980s


The Sloan-Proctor house was built by tobacconist Percy Sloan in the late 1910s - early for the bungalow style. He only occupied the house for a few years before it was sold to another tobacconist, WL Proctor. The historic inventory notes, that, at the time the above picture was taken, the house had been used by Durham Public Schools for storage for many years, and it was surrounded up to the foundation on all sides by parking lot.


Site of 224 Morris, 2006.

420 MORRIS STRET

The most impressive of the remaining houses on Morris Street is the house at 420 Morris St., the Whitesell House. It retains signficant elaborate exterior millwork on the porch and each gable peak. Some resemblance can be noted with the houses that were located on the the corner of Morris and Morgan St.


Whitesell House, 1980.


Whitesell House, 2006.

On 02.25.2008, Measurement Incorporated bought this house from previous owner Steve Peters, owner and operator of Peters' Design Works, for $1,000,000. As of 2011, I believe Peters continues to live in the house. Ultimately, I suspect that MI did not pay $1M in order to keep a Victorian house on this land, so I believe it is likely a matter of when rather than if this house will no longer be here.


420 Morris Street, 05.30.11

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36.001507,-78.90327

Saturday, September 23, 2006

305 MORRIS STREET / POPE-SLATER HOUSE


Pope-Slater House, 1980

The house at 305 Morris Street was a Queen Anne Victorian built in 1905 by John W. Pope, a tobacco warehouseman and Durham County Treasurer in the late 1880s. This house replaced an earlier one-story house occupied by Mr. Pope and his family since 1883.

There was also a separate two-story house in the backyard, connected to the main structure by a latticed breezeway. The outbuilding was run as a boarding house annex.


The rear of the house, showing the annex, ~1980.

The property stayed in the family, and, according to a current resident of Morris St., was occupied by several older women who ran the entire house as a boarding house during the 1970s. Per the same resident, once the women passed away, the house became abandoned, and occupied by homeless people. The house eventually burned.


Site of Pope-Slater House, 2006



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36.000141,-78.903963

Thursday, September 21, 2006

101-103 MORRIS STREET - THE SALVATION ARMY


105 Morris St., early 1920s
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection - Parnell Collection)

The Salvation Army was established in Durham in January 1888, when "Captain and Mrs. Denton" were appointed to lead the organization, whose first headquarters were located on McMannen Street. Shortly thereafter, "Captain Fielding" and "Lieutenant Keyser" joined the administration of the organization.

In May, 1910, the Durham Corps of the Salvation Army was recorded in territorial records of the organization, and "Captain and Mrs. JV Brezeale" were sent to Durham to re-establish the organization, which relocated to 321 West Main St. The group remained at 321 W. Main for 6 years, until they relocated briefly to 309 Roxboro St. while their new structure was built at 101-103 Morris St. This section of Morris St. had been residential through the latter part of the 19th century, but these houses began to be supplanted by commercial structures in the first decades of the 20th century.

The new building was completed in 1917, and housed the organization for the next 50 years.


The mostly residential west side of Morris St. can be seen in this 1924 photo, with the crenelations atop the Salvation Army building poking above the east side structures.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection. Scanned by Digital Durham)

In 1926, a group in Wilmington had requested the help of the national Salvation Army in establishing a "home for unwed mothers." Per the Herald-Sun, this was moved to Durham in 1931 due to "greater medical advantages." As it happened, the former Southern Conservatory of Music Building on S. Alston Avenue had recently closed down, unable to continue financially. The Salvation Army purchased that building and renovated it; by 1953 it could house 33 mothers and 15 babies. The 'home' was staffed by Salvation Army officers and employees.

Per the Herald-Sun, the Salvation Army band was "a familiar sight on Morris Street."


Looking east, 1953.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun)


West Side of Morris St. 1963

Below, looking north on Morris St. from Five Points, 1971 - an oblique picture of the Salvation Army building is visible.

(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)

The Salvation Army building on Morris St. was taken by the City of Durham and demolished using urban renewal funds early in 1972 . The Salvation Army moved to the Perry Building on N. Mangum St. for several years, and moved to the former Durham Sun Building on East Main St. in the 1970s. It appears that they moved to their current location at Liberty St. and South Alston Avenue by 1980.

The former site of the Salvation Army building was consolidated with all of the other parcels in the block bounded by Morris, West Main, Morgan, and Great Jones, and became the site of the new First Federal Building.


Former site of the Salvation Army building, under construction for the First Federal Building - 1972
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)


Completed First Federal Building.
(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)

First Federal eventually gave way to SouthBank, which owned the buiding up until it was purchased by Greenfire Development - in, I believe, 2007.


West Side of Morris St. 2006

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35.997404,-78.904057

NW CORNER - MORRIS STREET AND MORGAN STREET

Morris Street was one of the early, prominent residential sections of Durham, developed with larger, two-story houses during the 1880s and 1890s. This residential development was interrupted by the development of Fallon and Martin Company, followed by the Imperial Tobacco Company in the 200 block of Morris St.


Looking northwest and Morgan and Morris, 1924
(Courtesy Durham County LIbrary)

Residential structures on Morris St. were increasingly supplanted by commercial structures and parking through the early to mid-20th century. Two of these structures survived up until 1948, at which point they were condemned by the City of Durham; gotta admire that consistency.


(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection - Dixon Collection)

The site became - what else? - a parking lot, the Official Surface of Durham, NC.


Parking lot, looking southeast towards then-city hall on Morris St., 09.18.52

The city purchased the dirt lot from the owners, and converted it into a parking lot for City Hall.
(Courtesy The Herald Sun)


Parking Lot, looking northeast across Morgan St. towards Morris St., 08.17.53. You can see what changes the car had wrought in a relatively short period of time.
(Courtesy The Herald Sun)


Same lot, looking northwest from Morris and Morgan.
(Courtesy The Herald Sun)

After City Hall moved east to N. Mangum St. in 1975, the parking lot became available. It was


Brand-spanking new Liberty bank, July 1975
(Courtesy Durham County Library)

RBC Centura took over the building at some point, and they continue to operate the bank structure in 2009.

And the same viewpoint, 2006.


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