Route II: South & East Charlotte
At about the same time as
Latta began his Dilworth venture, others in Charlotte were also
busy changing farmland into suburbia. Up until 1891 the Cherry
neighborhood that you are now entering was cotton fields belonging
to John and Mary Myers. An old farm road connecting their farmstead
with Charlotte passed through a secluded hollow here and up a hill
past a row of old abandoned slave cabins. Cherry trees lined the
hill, "not wild cherries" remembered an old resident, "real
cherries, they made the best pies."
The Myers' built rental
housing in the hollow and provided black unskilled and semi-skilled
laborers with the opportunity for home ownership and urban
amenities, eventually including a park, school, store, churches,
and tree-lined streets. When construction began, Cherry was a
self-contained village, half a mile across the fields from the
city's Second Ward.
Contrary to local myth, the
Cherry neighborhood was not built in response to the development of
Myers Park as a residential area for black servants, but in fact
preceded its neighbor by as much as twenty years.
Just
past the stop sign at Baxter St., pause to view the Morgan School
across the park on your left.
15. Like many Charlotte schools, Morgan School was a product of the
1920s. It was also a product of racial segregation, remaining
exclusively black until it was closed as an elementary school in
1968. The architect was Louis Asbury, Sr., a native Charlottean who
designed several significant structures in Charlotte in the first
half of the twentieth century, including Hawthorne Lane Methodist Church,
Myers Park Methodist Church, and the former Mecklenburg County Courthouse on
E. Trade St.

Morgan School
Continue on Baldwin to Luther St., and pause just before the
intersection.
16. To your right, the New England
picture-book chapel is one of Cherry's three churches. It is now
the Mt. Zion Church of God Holiness, but when it was erected in
1896 it was a Lutheran
missionary church. The story of the church is closely connected
to its founding pastor, William Philo Phifer. Phifer was one of the
first black preachers to be ordained in the Carolinas after the
Civil War by the Lutheran Church. He established a large
congregation in the former black community of "Brooklyn" in
uptown's 2nd Ward, where a church was built in 1893. Three years
later he organized the Cherry Lutheran Church and also ran a small
school.

Lutheran Church in the Cherry neighborhood
17. Notice the house diagonally opposite
from where you are stopped. The earliest architecture in Cherry was
similar to the single-family dwellings found on tenant farms and in
mill villages of the late nineteenth century. The corner house is a
good example of this style. Though small for a family, this was
more luxurious than many working class homes in 2nd Ward and had
sufficient land for a kitchen garden. In addition to these older
homes, Cherry also had many post-World War I Bungalow-style houses
with their prominent roofs sweeping low over large porches.
Turn
left onto Luther St. and continue on Luther St. for several blocks
until you reach the intersection with Kings Dr. Turn right at the
intersection onto Kings Dr. Just after the intersection of Kings
Dr. and 3rd St. notice St. Mary's Chapel on your
left.
18. In 1887, when the Thompson Orphanage
was founded, it owned many acres of farmland along the hillside
here. The orphanage itself straddled what is now Independence Blvd,
and its Gothic-style chapel
was built in 1892. The orphanage was supported by St. Peter's Episcopal Church
at 7th and Tryon in uptown Charlotte. George Pavell was 11 in 1929
when he arrived at the orphanage. He remembers rising at 6 a.m.,
doing chores, having breakfast, and walking to school. Later there
would be time for football in the fields nearby: "That's where we
learned agility. We had to be agile to miss what the cows had left
behind." The chapel can be reserved for public functions by calling
the Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation Department.

Thompson Orphanage
Chapel
Continuing on Kings,
cross 4th St., and turn right at the next traffic light onto
Elizabeth Ave.
Continue touring...
This site was created using a Macintosh Performa 6290 by Bruce Schulman. This site is
maintained for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks
Commission by Bruce R. Schulman.
|