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Survey and Research Report
The Samuel
Younts House
136 Main
Street
Pineville,
North Carolina
Prepared
by Lara Ramsey
August 13,
2003
1.
Name and location of the property: The property known as the
Samuel Younts House is located at 136 Main Street, Pineville, North
Carolina.
2.
Name and address of the current owner(s) of the property:
The
current owner of the property is:
Tami
Curtin (TMC Holdings, LLC)
4037
Bramborough Drive
Fort Mill,
SC 29715
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 a map depicting the location of the property.

5.
Current deed book reference to the property: The most recent
deed to the property can be found in Mecklenburg County Deed Book 13423, p.
467. The tax parcel number for the property is 205-014-05.
6.
A brief historical sketch of the property: This report
contains a brief historical sketch of the property prepared by Lara Ramsey.
7.
A brief architectural description of the property: This report
contains a brief architectural description of the property prepared by Lara
Ramsey.
8.
Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets the
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
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission judges that the Samuel
Younts House possesses special significance in terms of
Charlotte-Mecklenburg. The Commission bases its judgment on the following
considerations:
1.
The Samuel Younts House, constructed circa 1873, was the home of
Samuel Younts, a successful merchant and one of the founding members of the
town of Pineville. In addition to owning and running a general store on Main
Street, Younts was also a mule-trader (a lucrative business in Pineville),
a cotton-broker, and a money-lender. Younts was listed in the Pineville
Town Charter as one of the town's first commissioners, and the boundaries of
the new municipality were drawn one-half mile in each direction from Younts's
store.
2. The Younts House, located along Main
Street in Pineville, stands as a physical reflection of a more urban
landscape emerging within Mecklenburg's small towns in the late nineteenth
century, with businesses, stores, churches, schools and residences all
clustered along a series of streets oriented toward a Main Street (or
central thoroughfare). The Younts House was among the first residences
built in Pineville and helped to form what, in the years after its
construction, would become the center of the town.
3. The Younts House provides a good example
of how in-town houses differed from the rural farmhouses that dotted the
countryside just around these communities. In addition to the its location
along Main Street, the size of the Younts House, its brick construction, and
its exterior and interior details (including the elegant Italianate windows
and subtle brick detailing) helped to differentiate it from rural
homesteads, and even from the more modest houses built within the town.
4. The Younts House not only served as a
residence for one of the communities earliest businessmen and leaders, but
also as a community hospital. In 1947, the house was converted into a small
hospital by Dr. Ralph Reid, a Pineville native and the town's resident
physician. The hospital remained in operation under Dr. Reid until 1967.
b.
Integrity of design, workmanship, materials, feeling, and
association.
The Commission contends that
the architectural description prepared by Lara Ramsey demonstrates that the
Samuel Younts House meets 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 that becomes a
designated “historic landmark.” The current appraised value of the house is
$210,900.00. The appraised value of the .63-acre lot is $329,300.00.
Date of preparation of this
report:
August 13, 2003
Prepared by:
Lara Ramsey
2436 North Albany Avenue, Apt. 1
Chicago, IL 60647
Statement
of Significance
The Samuel
Younts House
136 Main
Street
Pineville,
North Carolina
Summary
The Samuel Younts House, located at 136 Main Street in
the town of Pineville, is a structure that possesses local historic
significance as one of the earliest residences in Pineville and as the home
of Samuel Younts, a successful merchant and one of the founding members of
the town. Constructed c. 1873, the Younts House stands as an early
indication of a residential element emerging within the small towns of
Mecklenburg County toward the end of the nineteenth century. The period
following the Civil War was one of tremendous growth for Mecklenburg County,
and this growth translated into the creation and expansion of its small
towns. Fueled by the new cotton economy, these towns grew from sparsely
populated outposts into thriving communities, each with its own businesses,
churches and schools.
Pineville was among Mecklenburg’s expanding
Reconstruction-era towns. Incorporated as an independent municipality in
1873, Pineville began as a small stagecoach stop called Morrow’s Turnout.
With the construction of the Charlotte & South Carolina Railway in 1852,
Pineville became part of the expanding network of cities and towns within
the county and the state that were connected by rail. Although still
considered small and largely rural when compared to urban centers like
Charlotte, Pineville and other Mecklenburg County towns offered close and
convenient places for farmers to bring crops and for families to come
together to worship, buy goods, and socialize with neighbors.
With the expansion of Mecklenburg’s towns came the
formation of a new group of entrepreneurs, “the army of the enterprising and
the hard,” determined to take advantage of every business opportunity within
their communities.1
Among the most successful of these small town businessmen was Samuel Younts.
A blacksmith originally from Davidson County, Younts and his family settled
in the area that would become Pineville after the Civil War. Within a few
years, Younts had established several thriving businesses in the town,
including a general store, a mule-trading business, and a money-lending
service.2
Samuel Younts was not only Pineville’s most prosperous merchant, but also
one of its most involved citizens. One of the founders of the town, Younts
was listed in the Pineville town charter as one of four original
commissioners. He and son John A. Younts also donated property and materials
for the building of the Pineville Presbyterian Church and for the
construction of the Pineville United Methodist Church, of which they were
founding members.3
The impressive two-story brick house that Samuel Younts
built for his family on Main Street remains today as both an indication of
Younts’s position within Pineville’s newly-established merchant class and as
a reflection of the town’s emerging layout, with businesses, stores,
churches, schools and residences all clustered along a series of streets
oriented toward Main Street, the central thoroughfare. The Younts House was
among the first residences built in town and helped to form what, in the
years after its construction, would become the center of Pineville. Although
the basic form of the Samuel Younts house is not that far removed from the
more traditional rural farmhouses scattered throughout Mecklenburg County,
its location on Pineville's Main Street, its size, its brick construction
and architectural details help to distinguish it as a town residence.
Historical Background Statement
Mecklenburg County’s Small Towns
The Samuel Younts House was constructed during a time
of rapid change in Mecklenburg County. Before the outbreak of the Civil War
in 1861, the county’s economy, though almost exclusively agricultural, was
diverse and thriving; in 1850, Mecklenburg County ranked third in the state
in cotton production, eleventh in corn production, and twelfth in wheat
production.4
Most of these crops were transported to Charleston via river and road
routes, and often took over a week to reach the nearest market. With the
building of the Charlotte & South Carolina Railroad in 1852, movement of
goods became much easier and faster. By 1860 four railways crossed the
county, converging in Charlotte, its largest city.5
Although the Civil War took the lives of many of its
soldiers and completely disrupted the lives of its citizens, Mecklenburg
County emerged from the conflict in a relatively good position. Farmers,
many of whom owned modest acreage and had owned no slaves, quickly began to
replant their fields. Railroads damaged during the war were reconstructed,
and new railroad lines were added to the existing system. As the 1860s came
to a close, the county not only recovered from the ravages of the war but
began to thrive. This growth was most evident in Charlotte, the county’s
only true urban center, population of which rose from 2,265 persons in 1860 to
4,473 in 1870, making it the fifth largest city in North Carolina.6
This growth within Mecklenburg County after the Civil
War was not limited just to Charlotte. With the rebuilding and continued
expansion of the railroads, several small settlements surfaced along their
routes. These settlements, often begun as simple shipping and trading posts
for local farmers, evolved into flourishing communities during the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Huntersville, located in the
northwestern edge of the county, grew up along the reconstructed tracks of
the Atlantic, Tennessee, and Ohio Railroad in the late 1870s. Cornelius, a
former cotton weigh station three miles north of Huntersville along the A.T.
& O. line, was incorporated as a town in 1905. Once a rural stagecoach stop
called Fullwood’s Store, the Town of Matthews developed around a depot built
for the Carolina Central Railway in 1872 and was incorporated seven years
later.7
 |
|
Main Street Of Pineville In 1915 |
As Mecklenburg’s small towns expanded, a distinctive
landscape began to emerge within them, combining elements of both city and
rural life. Each town comprised a main street almost always oriented to the
local railroad. General stores, grocers, banks, drug stores and post
offices lined this street, making up a modest commercial district usually no
more than one block long. Small industries, including corn and flour mills
and livery stables, were often placed behind the more prominent businesses
along the street.8
Branching from this commercial core were several residential streets,
creating a small version of the “uptown” neighborhoods found in larger
cities. Often, the first residents within the town were those people—large
farmers, merchants, and business owners—who presided over most of the town’s
commercial activity. Placed among this commercial and residential mix were
the community’s churches and, later, schools. Although clearly influenced
by the physical layouts of cities like Charlotte, these towns were still
rural at heart. Dr. Richard Mattson, in his essay on small towns in
Mecklenburg County, notes that: “The countryside eased into town in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as farms and woodland rolled along
behind town lots.” The county’s towns “were settled primarily by rural folk,
and traditional farmhouse designs often occupied parcels broad enough for
flourishing kitchen gardens, smokehouses, and other assorted outbuildings.
Street patterns also reflected rural precedents.”9
All of these features, rural and urban, came together to form a common
geography for all of Mecklenburg’s small towns.
Pineville
Pineville was among the first of Mecklenburg County’s
railroad communities. Pineville began as a small community centered around a
stagecoach stop along one of the county’s wagon roads. The settlement was
named “Morrow’s Turnout” for one of the first families to come to the area.
In October 1852, the county’s first rail line, the Charlotte & South
Carolina Railroad, was completed, linking Charlotte to Columbia, South
Carolina. A passenger and freight station was constructed at Morrow’s
Turnout, making the settlement one of the first in the county to be located
along a railroad. According to local legend, the depot was named “Pineville”
after the “many large and beautiful pine trees casting their shadows over
the community.”10
In the years following the Civil War, Pineville
developed into a small but thriving cotton and mule market. Journalist and
longtime Pineville resident H. E. C. “Red Buck” Bryant described the
day-to-day workings of the community in an article for the Charlotte
Observer:
Its merchants not only bought and distributed cotton in bales but sold the
mules which helped to produce the crops. Sections of North Carolina and
upper South Carolina, where cotton was king, had to have shavetails (mules)
to get the work done. Some new ones were needed each spring and Pineville
was the place to get them. Drovers would bring them in, sound and 16 hands
high, generally young and ready to “break to plow and wagon”11
Pineville continued to expand through the last decades of the nineteenth
century. In 1873, the community was incorporated as an independent
municipality—one of the earliest of the railroad settlements to do so. The
1870s was a period of growing commercial activity in the young town.
Pineville now boasted grocers, liquor stores, general stores, a flour mill,
and a post office.12
A mere ten years after its incorporation, Pineville was listed in
Branson’s North Carolina Business Directory as having two drugstores, a
grocer, and ten general stores—more businesses than any small town other
than Davidson.13
By 1900, Pineville was the largest of Mecklenburg’s towns, with a population
of almost 600 people.14
The success of Pineville and other small towns like it was due in large
part to the entrepreneurship of a new and shrewd group of businessmen, all
eager to take advantage of every opportunity afforded them in these new
outposts. These men owned and ran general stores, were involved in cotton
brokering, mule trading, banking, and a host of other business activities.
Many were also involved in local politics and were active members of local
churches. In many ways, Mecklenburg’s businessmen helped to shape their
towns as much as the railroads did.
Samuel Younts
Among the most successful and influential businessmen in the budding town
of Pineville was Samuel Younts. Younts was born on December 25, 1825, in
Davidson County, North Carolina. The son of Rudolph Younts and Mary Owens,
he married Barbara Palmer in Davidson County in 1845.15
The couple soon moved to Mecklenburg County and settled in the Mallard Creek
township, where Samuel found work as a blacksmith. By 1860, the Younts
family had again moved and were listed in that year’s census records as
living in the “Eastern Division” of the county.16
Samuel returned to Mecklenburg after serving in the Confederate Army, and,
sometime after the end of the Civil War, he and his family moved to the
Pineville area, where Samuel opened a general store. Younts quickly
established himself as a very successful businessman in the area. In
addition to owning and running the store, Younts was also a mule-trader (a
lucrative business in Pineville), a cotton-broker, and a money-lender. All
of these separate businesses constituted Samuel Younts & Son, a company that
Younts shared with his eldest son, John A. Younts.17
Deed records show that Samuel and John A. Younts purchased numerous parcels
of land ranging from 20 to 200 acres in the 1870s and 1880s in and around
the town, including a large parcel that included a substantial part of Main
Street. A deed dated 1892 (just two years after Samuel Younts’s death) lists
a number of brick and frame store buildings along Main Street that housed
the operations of Younts & Son.18
Local tradition holds that Samuel Younts was easily among the wealthiest
businessmen in Pineville, if not the county. One newspaper article
recounting the town’s history claimed: “His [Samuel Younts’s] volume of
business ran between $150,000 and $175,000 a year—and those were not the
kind of dollars we know now.”19
Younts was known as an astute businessman, and a person whose mind was
always on his work. One of Samuel's daughters used to tell a story of how,
during a service at the Presbyterian church, her father stopped in the
middle of prayer to ask her brother if he had charged a customer for some horseshoes.20
Samuel Younts was known in Pineville and the surrounding area not only as
a prosperous merchant, but also an active member of the small town. When it
was incorporated in 1873 (several years before Huntersville and Matthews),
the town of Pineville was still a very rural place, consisting mainly of
scattered farmhouses with few businesses, no church buildings, and no school
building. Samuel Younts played an integral part in the development of the
town during its first decades. Younts was listed in the Pineville town
charter as one of its founding members and first commissioners. Even the
boundaries of the town began at Younts’s store, radiating out half a mile in
each direction.21
Although best known as shrewd businessmen and landowners, Samuel and son
John were generous with their large landholdings, donating a parcel along
Main Street for the Pineville Presbyterian Church in 1876 and a lot on Polk
Street to the Pineville Methodist Church two years later. Samuel and John
Younts were also founding members of the Methodist Church.22
The Samuel Younts House
Given Samuel Younts’s prominent position within the town of Pineville, it
is not surprising that he chose to build his home in the heart of the newly
incorporated community. Around 1873, Younts erected a two-story brick house
on a portion of his landholdings along the north side of Main Street.23
Its location along Pineville’s main commercial thoroughfare was not the only
feature of the house that set it apart from the farmhouses that surrounded
the town’s small center. The size of the house, the brick construction, and
the exterior and interior detailing helped to differentiate it from those
more modest homesteads, and even from the other houses built within the
town.
In the 1860s and 1870s, traditional housing forms still dominated
residential construction within the county. In rural areas, the most common
form remained the I-house, a simple side-gable structure that was usually
one room deep. Even those homes built by wealthy farmers or town-dwellers
tended to retain the I-house form or to adopt simple variations like the
gable-front-and-wing. The form of Samuel Younts’s new house, a
gable-front-and-wing with gabled rear ell, was more complex than the
ubiquitous I-house, but was relatively reserved when compared to the more
irregular plans of the Queen Anne style homes that would be built in towns
like Matthews and Cornelius in the next two decades.24
Like many homeowners, Samuel Younts attempted to ‘dress up’ his house with
more ornate exterior detailing. Most of these details were Italianate,
including segmented arch windows, decorative brickwork, and a large
shed-roof front porch. The 2/2, segmented arch windows, with their large
panes of glass, were a definite departure from the usual farmhouse windows,
and the simple brick work over the windows added another level of decoration
to the fenestration. The woodwork on the front porch and under the eaves of
the house were elaborate, and, given the new methods of mass-producing
building materials, were probably machine-made.25
Inside the Younts House, the expansive center stair hall, with its high
ceilings and impressive staircase with simple yet elegant rounded hand rail
and turned balusters, continued the feeling of luxury displayed on the
house’s exterior.

Samuel Younts lived and worked in Pineville until his death on April 27,
1890. His widow Barbara and daughter Beulah continued to live in the house
after Samuel’s death, and his sons John and William continued to run the
family business.26
John Younts was as prominent a member of the town of Pineville as his father
had been, serving as its mayor from 1896 to 1898.27
With Barbara’s death in 1905, the house was left to Beulah, with the
stipulation that “If she [Beulah] should die without bodily heirs, house and
aforesaid shall be divided between my following named grandchildren:
Charlie Younts, Paul R. L. Younts, and Annie Russell.”28
One of these grandchildren, Paul Younts, would later become a general in the
United States Army, Charlotte’s postmaster general, and North Carolina state
highway commissioner.29
Beulah continued to live in the house after her mother's death. Although
little remained of Samuel Younts & Son by the early decades of the twentieth
century, Beulah still managed some of the family's farmland located on the
outskirts of the town. A black tenant farmer named Bun Feaster farmed the
plot, coming up to the Younts House every morning to get mules from the barn
that sat just to the west of the house. Feaster's daughter Jesse was also
Beulah's cook and housekeeper.30
Tom Eubanks, who lived across the street from the Younts House as a young
boy in the 1930s, remembers Beulah sitting out on the front porch every
afternoon in her best clothes. Eubanks was a frequent visitor to the house,
where he would listen to Beulah tell stories about her family. Beulah would
describe how, when Samuel came home from the Civil War, the family tried to
run him off the property because no-one recognized him, and how the
Charleston earthquake of 1886 rattled the dishes in the kitchen.31
After Beulah's death, ownership of the house went to the three grandchildren
named in Barbara Younts's will.32
In 1947, the house was purchased by Dr. Ralph Reid, Pineville’s resident
physician. Reid, a Pineville native and graduate of Columbia University’s
School of Medicine, first opened a small practice above the Pineville Drug
Company in 1944. Dr. Reid soon outgrew the small space and, intending to
expand his practice even further, bought the large brick house on Main
Street and converted it into a small community hospital.33
Reid used the front parlor on the first floor as his office, and
reconfigured the upstairs bedrooms into examination rooms. These examination
rooms, as well as the remaining rooms downstairs, were also used for
overnight patients.34
Dr. Reid, who had been chief resident at Charlotte Memorial Hospital from
1942 to 1944 and still performed surgeries there, would often make his
rounds in Charlotte in the early morning before coming back to the hospital
in Pineville, remaining there until late into the night. Joe Griffin, a
local historian, recalls that “many surgeries were performed here and
hundreds of babies delivered. Dr. Reid probably delivered more babies in
Pineville than any other doctor. I’m sure he delivered two generations in
many families. . .”35
The hospital remained in operation under Dr. Reid until 1967. Reid
continued to practice medicine in Pineville until his death in 1979.36
After serving as a rental property for ten years, the Younts House was sold
by Dr. Reid’s widow and was, like so many other buildings on Main Street,
converted into an antiques shop. The Younts House is currently occupied by
Blis Salon and owned by its proprietor, Tami Curtin.
Physical Description
Site Description
The Samuel Younts House is located at 136 Main Street within the town of
Pineville in southern Mecklenburg County. The house sits on a .63-acre lot
on the north side of the street, facing south. To the east of the house is
a small one-story brick building. A modern one-story brick office building
sits on the lot to the west of the house.37
The area of the property to the east of the house has been paved in to
provide a parking lot for the building, and the entire parcel is surrounded
by a wrought-iron fence with brick posts.
Architectural Description
The Younts House is a two story modification of the gable-front-and-wing
form, with a two-story gabled ell projecting from the rear of the wing. The
front gable, approximately one bay wide and two bays deep, extends only
slightly past the side-gable wing (two bays wide and one bay deep). The
rear gable ell adjoining the front wing is linked to the front gable by a
hip-roof connection, creating a more box-like plan and complex roofline than
is seen on the typical gable-front-and-wing form. The exterior walls of the
house are constructed of brick and faced with running bond. The brick has
been painted a light grey. The multiple roofline is punctuated by two
interior chimneys and covered with slate shingles in a variegated pattern,
with the exception of the north slope of the side gable wing, which has been
covered with corrugated metal. A series of one-story brick additions
project from the rear of the main structure; according to Tom Eubanks, the
house originally had a shed-roof rear kitchen addition that connected to the
main house through the door on the back wall of the stair hall. The
additions that are presently on the house were probably added by Dr. Reid
and subsequent owners.
Several architectural details on the exterior are Italianate, a building
style that was more commonly used in commercial buildings in the area.38
Windows on the original portion of the house are double hung units topped
with a segmented arch. Each sash is divided into two large lights with a
thin vertical muntin. Above many of the windows is a gently curving brick
crown mirroring the shape of the segmented arch. On portions of the east,
south (façade) and west elevations, a narrow brick stringcourse runs just
above the second floor windows, curving over the segmented arches.
Ornamental bargeboard (a popular decoration from the Queen Anne style)
originally lined the front gable on the façade. This decoration was removed
when Dr. Reid converted the house to a hospital, along with the shed roof
front porch that extended across the façade. The porch was replaced by an
enclosed brick entrance, which was probably considered more appropriate for
the new use of the building. Other alterations to the exterior include a
handicap ramp leading to a door that has been built into the east elevation
and a fire escape leading to a door fashioned from a second-story window
opening on the west elevation.
The main entrance of the Younts House leads directly into a spacious
central stair hall. The half-pace stair is placed in the back of the room,
with the first run of the stair rising along the west wall of the room. The
substantial yet elegant newel post connects to a rounded stair rail. Two
delicate balusters are placed along each tread of the staircase, and simple
brackets decorate the side of the stair wall. The simple baseboards, door
surrounds, high ceilings and wide-plank wood flooring seen in the stair hall
continue throughout the downstairs rooms comprising the original house. The
room located in the southwest corner of the first floor also contains one of
two remaining fire place mantles in the house, which is flanked by two
bookcases. A doorway on the north wall of the stair hall leads into the
shed-roof addition, which has recently been remodeled after a fire. From
that addition, one can access the other additions to the
house.
The second run of the stair continues up to a central room on the second
floor. Originally, four rooms opened onto this central room; the arrangement
of rooms was first altered by Dr. Reid to better facilitate the activities
of the hospital. Two doors on the east wall of the central room open into
small antechambers, each leading into a small room. One of these rooms,
located in the northeast corner of the house, contains a fireplace mantle
ornamented with simple scrollwork, organic, rounded shapes, and trefoil. On
the west side of the second floor, there is a room in the southwest corner,
a bathroom to the north of this room, and, to the north of the bathroom, a
small hallway running to the west wall of the house. This hallway has two
doors along its north wall leading into two small spaces divided by a
partition wall. This wall runs up to a window on the house’s north wall, but
does not disturb it. .
Despite the alterations that have been made to it over the years, the
Samuel Younts House stands as a testament to the prosperity and importance
of one of Pineville’s first and wealthiest merchants, and as an example of
the burgeoning small town landscape within Mecklenburg County in the late
nineteenth century. The house has evolved to fit the changing community,
serving first as an imposing residence for one of its founders, then as a
hospital for all of its citizens, and later as a commercial property
catering to shoppers drawn to Main Street for its charming collection of
antique stores. The Younts House remains, after more than 120 years, an
important part of Pineville’s architectural and social history.
1 Richard L. Mattson, “Historic Landscapes of
Mecklenburg County: The Small Towns,” July 1991 <Small
Towns of Mecklenburg County>
(July 28, 2003), Chapter 1 (“Rise of the Small Towns”).
2 Joe H.
Griffin, “Who was Samuel Younts?” (portion of unpublished manuscript
provided by Mr. Griffin), 1; Joe H. Griffin, interview by
author, Pineville, North Carolina, 17 July 2003.
5 LeGette Blythe and Charles R. Brockman, Hornet's
Nest: The Story of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County (Charlotte:
McNally of Charlotte, 1961), 259-262.
6 Joines and Morrill, Reconstruction Era.
7 Blythe and Brockman, 417-422.
8 Mattson, chapter 2 (“Main Streets”).
9 Mattson, chapter 3 (“Uptowns and Residences”)
10 Joe H. Griffin, My Hometown—Pineville: History,
Hearsay, Memories & Scrapbook of Pineville (Pineville, NC: J. H.
Griffin, 2001), 8.
11 H.E.C. Bryant, “Pineville was Quite a Town,”
Charlotte Observer, 21 May 1967 (vertical file,
“Mecklenburg Co. Towns—Pineville,” Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room,
Main Branch, ecklenburg County Public Libraries)
12 Levi Branson (ed.), North Carolina Business
Directory, 1872-1878, vol. 1 (Raleigh, NC: Nichols and
Gorman, 1872), 144-145; Levi Branson, North Carolina Business
Directory, 1872-1878, vol. 5 (Raleigh, NC: Nichols and Gorman,
1878), 192-193.
13 “Merchants and Tradesmen in Mecklenburg County in
1884. . .As Recorded in the Branson County Directory,”
Olde Mecklenburg Genealogical Society Quarterly 17, no. 2 (1999),
20-23.
14 Mattson, chapter 1 (“Rise of the Small Towns”).
16 U.S. Census, North Carolina, Mecklenburg County,
1860, p. 59-60.
17 Griffin, interview; My Hometown—Pineville,
13; Bryant, “Pineville Was Quite a Town.”
18 Mecklenburg County Deed Book 84, page 333.
19 “Pineville Has Been Important Area of Mecklenburg
Since Its Founding,” Charlotte Observer, 28
February 1950 (vertical file, “Mecklenburg Co. Towns—Pineville,”
Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room, Main Branch, Mecklenburg County
Public Libraries).
20 Tom Eubanks, telephone interview by author, 13
August 2003.
21 Pineville Town Charter, ratified 28 February 1873
(vertical file, “Mecklenburg Co. Towns—Pineville,” Robinson-Spangler
Carolina Room, Main Branch, Mecklenburg County Public Libraries)
22 “Who was Samuel Younts?”, 1; Griffin , interview.
22 “Who was Samuel Younts?”, 1; “Renovations Being
Made to Historic Reid Building,” (name and date of
newspaper unknown; given to author by Tami Curtin) Although the chain
of title breaks down with the will of Barbara Younts
(dated 1905), the lot on which the house was built was almost certainly
part of a larger parcel along Main Street purchased by Samuel in 1868
from B. F. Morrow (Mecklenburg County Deed Book 6, page 566). The exact
year that the house was constructed in not known, and the year 1873,
which appears in several newspaper articles about the house, was
probably taken from the date of the town's charter, in which Samuel
Younts' store on Main Street is mentioned.
24 Mattson, chapter 3 (“Uptowns and Residences”)
25 Catherine W. Bishir, et al., Architects and
Builders in North Carolina: A History of the Practice of
Building (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990),
219-226.
26
U.S. Census, North Carolina, Mecklenburg
County, 1900, p.
27 Blythe and Brockman, 450.
28 Mecklenburg County Will Book, page 485.
29 “Paul R. Younts, Man of the Year,” Charlotte News,
30 December 1961 (article provided by Joe Griffin).
32 Mecklenburg County Deed Book 1132 Page 528.
33 “Doctor to a Generation of Pineville Residents,”
Charlotte Observer, 10 April 1979, 6A.
35 My Hometown—Pineville, 69.
36 “Doctor to a Generation of Pineville Residents,”
6A.
37 This lot originally contained a frame barn owned by
the Younts family.
38
Thomas W. Hanchett, “Charlotte
Architecture: Design Through Time, Part I,” <http://www.cmhpf.org/educationarchitecturpt1.htm>
(28 July 2003), section III (“Victorian Period”);
Virginia and Lee McAlester, A Field Guide to American Houses (New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000). Virginia and Lee McAlester show
several examples of “asymmetrical” gable-front- and-wing
Italianate houses built in North Carolina, Kentucky, and Alabama during
the mid-to-late 1800s. The Younts House is very similar to the
two-story examples of this style.
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