Wednesday, April 25, 2007

104-106 WEST PARRISH

The buildings at 104 and 106 West Parrish St. were constructed in 1908 and 1909, respectively.


106 West Parrish rendering


West Parrish from Orange St., looking northwest, 1922.


A bird's-eye view of Parrish Street, looking northwest, 1924.
(Courtesy Duke Archives)

106 West Parrish, the brick building on the northwest corner of Orange St. and West Parrish, was built by William P. Clements for his office. According to a publication by the Merchants' Association, he was "an extensive dealer in real estate."

108 West Parrish St., immediately to the west of the Clements building, was built by the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association to provide additional office space for their growing company.


Above, a view of the upper floors, looking northeast, 1923.
(Courtesy Duke Archives)

NC Mutual soon took over the Clements building as well for their district office. 106 West Parrish housed the Reformer Publishing Company, which printed the Durham Reformer and the NC Mutual company newspaper The North Carolina Mutual

By the 1950s, Rose's Furniture had moved into these storefronts.


Looking northeast, 1960
(Courtesy Duke Archives)


Looking northwest, 1963. Orange St. is on the left, N. Mangum on the right. A partial view of the side of the Clements building is visible past Boone Drugs.

Below, a view of both buildings, 1962.


Rose's furniture had closed by the 1970s

Looking northwest, 1978.

Today, 106 West Parrish has been boarded/vacant for some time, but it has been purchased by Center Studio Architecture. 108 West Parrish contains both businesses and residence(s?).

Looking northwest, 2007

8 comments:

Andrew said...

I always wondered if the corner building had any connection to Howard Clement's family, but probably not, considering the "s" on the end of the building's name?

--ASE.

Carey said...

I look forward to the day, hopefully, when the City agrees to tear down their parking deck and allow for redevelopment on the site along Chapel Hill, Mangum, Parrish and Orange Streets. What a beautiful terminating vista the post office provides at the end of Orange Street - if only they would cut back those scraggly looking trees.

Gary said...

Andrew -

Well, the historic inventory calls Clements "a white businessman", so conclude what you will from that.

Carey -

Agreed - the triangle between Orange, CH, and Mangum has, in my mind, some of the best urban space-creation potential downtown. I think you'll enjoy a picture I am going to post tomorrow which shows that terminating vista.

GK

Joe said...

Those non-orthogonal buildings and streets are refreshing to the eye. Having everything square just gets boring after a while.

Toby said...

I noticed yesterday that the facade of (I believe) 106 W. Parrish has been stripped, apparently in preparation for renovations. I asked one of the men working on the demo crew about what will be done with the front face of the building, but he didn't know.

Does anyone out there in ED-land have an insight here? I really hope the brick facade will be restored.

Toby

Toby said...

Correction to my previous comment: the building under renovation is NOT 106 W. Parrish, but 108-114. The second floor facade (currently painted a light green) appears unaffected.

Sorry for any confusion. I am still looking for information about what will happen with the first floor facade.

Aaron said...

Yes renovation is happening next door, however 106 W. Parrish is under contract with plans for a historical renovation: http://www.bullocity.us/tag/106wparrish/

Gary said...

Aaron

Exciting news - since you linked your comment to your development co. site, could you please credit me for the rendering you pulled off of here and put on your development site? I spent a lot of time scanning pictures to find that old rendering -

Thanks

GK