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The Rise Of The Colonial Revival Style
Dr. Dan L. Morrill July, 2000
| These are the two homes of
Charlotte Mayor Frank R. McNinch. Different aren't
they? Why did the Mayor feel compelled to move?
These two houses represent a fundamental change that
occurred in American architecture in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries -- the rejection of Queen Anne
Victorianism and the embracing of Colonial
Revivalism. That's the Liddell-McNinch House on
North Church St. on the left and the Frank R.
McNinch House on Sharon Lane on the
right. |
Everywhere today you will see the products of
architects who fake their materials in order to simulate the charm
of craftsmanship. Houses two years old look like two hundred
years. . .. The public likes their scenic effect. There is a sort
of refuge in it, as dreams are a refuge from reality. . .. This
trend in architecture has so completely captured our domestic
work, that. . .such homes. . . have become little
theatres.
Professor H. Vandervoort Walsh, Columbia University
(1928)
This article
attempts to explain the rise of Colonial
Revivalism in Charlotte and to set forth the consequences of
that phenomenon in terms of appreciation of less revivalist motifs
such as Modernism.
Overwhelmingly conservative, Charlotte's business elite favors
revivalist styles of architecture, especially Colonial Revivalism.
This is evidenced by the design of the Cornwell Family Life Center
that Myers Park Baptist Church will build on the Bland-McAden House
site on Selwyn Avenue. The Family Life Center is Colonial
Revival to its core. The architecture of the building is familiar,
safe, traditional, and pleasant. It stirs no deep
emotions. It breaks no new intellectual ground. Indeed, this
writer finds it a bit boring. The destruction
of the Bland-McAden
House by Myers Park Baptist Church on July 17, 2000, raised
little public outcry, even from the neighbors. In this
writer's opinion, this meager reaction was partly due to the fact
that the great majority of Charlotte's affluent citizens have
little regard for the Craftsman
style of architecture or for any other design that does not seek
to mimic the past.
 |
 |
| The Bland-McAden House exhibits
distinctive characteristic of the Craftsman style. Note
the broad, overhanging eaves, the exposed rafters, and the
large, shed-roofed front porch. Many Charlotteans think
houses like this are ugly. |
The Cornwell Family
Center is a purposeful replication of concepts of beauty that
date from the Renaissance. Designers such as Andreas
Palladio and Sir Christopher Wren were among its champions.
Note the pedimented entrance. |
In his 1984 essay on the history of
architecture in Charlotte-Mecklenburg, Dr. Thomas W. Hanchett
asserts that by the 1920s the homes and offices of elite
Charlotteans "reflected this increased interest in tradition over
innovation, in social correctness rather than risk-taking."
Many examples of Charlotte's penchant for Colonial Revivalism
come readily to mind. Lynnwood, the
local home of philanthropist and industrialist James B. Duke, was
completed in 1922. The Howard Madison Wade
House, designed by nationally-known architect Charles Barton
Keen, was started in 1928 and finished in 1930. The Alexander James
House on Cherokee Road in Eastover looks like the centerpiece of
a baronial estate. It was completed in 1929.
 |
 |
|
| Lynnwood or the James
B. Duke Mansion (1922). Architect: C. C. Hook. |
Howard
Madison Wade House (1930). Architect: Charles
Barton Keen. |
| |
 |
| Architect Martin E. Boyer, Jr.
designed this Eastover home in 1929. Note the large
gable roof with end chimneys, the oculus lunette in the front
pediment, the dormers, and the central entrance with an arched
fanlight above. It essentially follows the same design
philosophy as that found in the Gautier-Gilchrist House in
Dilworth. |
The man who introduced Colonial Revivalism
into Charlotte-Mecklenburg's built or man-made environment was Charles
Christian Hook (1870-1938). Hook was a native of Wheeling,
West Virginia and graduate of Washington College, now Washington
University, in St. Louis. He came to Charlotte in 1890
to teach mechanical drawing in the Charlotte public schools.
In May 1891, Edward Dilworth Latta's Charlotte Consolidated
Construction Company or Four C's began selling lots in the streetcar
suburb of Dilworth,
and Hook began designing homes for wealthy suburbanites. It
was not long before he established himself as an
architect.
 |
| Charles Christian Hook as a
young man. |
Among Hook's earliest houses
was the Mallonee-Jones
House at 400 East Kingston Avenue. Completed in 1894, it is an
unambiguous example of the Queen
Anne style. The mechanical lathe and the scroll saw made
it possible for architects to adorn buildings with lavish
decorations in wood. That's what the Queen Anne style was all
about. It was a testimonial to modernity and made little
reference to the past.. Asymmetry and ornate wooden
ornamentation or filigree were its fundamental
characteristics. Just three years later, in 1897, Hook
completed his design for the Gautier-Gilchrist
House at 320 East Park Avenue. It is definitively Colonial
Revival. It is symmetrical. Dormers penetrate a gable
roof that surmounts the rectangular massing of the house. The
fenestration is regularly punctuated. Modillions decorate the
eaves, not lavishly ornamented bargeboards as one commonly finds in
Victorian homes.
 |
Gautier-Gilchrist House
(1897)
| The contrast
between these two houses designed by the same
architect within a three year period is
striking. In the case of the Mallonee-Jones
House, Hook was following accepted concepts of
Victorian design. The Gautier-Gilchrist
House, on the other hand, shows that Hook was
abandoning the Queen Anne style in favor of
Colonial
Revivalism. | | |
| Mallonee-Jones House
(1894) |
| |
| Hook was
following a national trend when fashioning structures like the
Gautier-Gilchrist House. Spurred on by such prominent
architectural firms as McKim, Mead and White, Colonial Revivalism
was sweeping the country in the 1890s. "Colonial houses, with
their white or brick red exteriors, their symmetry, and their
symbolic ties to our supposedly plain, honest forebears, were the
perfect antidote to Victorian opulence," writes Hanchett. In
September 1894, a local newspaper announced that Hook's design for
the J. Frank Wilkes House (no longer standing) on East Morehead St.
would adhere to the following principles:
"genuine 'ye olden time' house. . .after the
style of the typical Southern home, with four large columns, two
full stories high, surmounted by a classic pediment. Mr. Hook. .
will make the plans after the true classic style of architecture,
which at one time predominated in the South and is being revived.
The most striking feature of the house will be its simplicity of
design and convenience of arrangement. The so-called 'filigree'
ornamentation will not be a consideration, and only the true
design will be carried out and thus give Charlotte another new
style. . . ."
Hook "pointed the city in the new national
architectural direction," says Hanchett. Such Hook-designed
houses as the Villalonga-Alexander
House, the Walter Brem
House, and the William Henry Belk
House had the symmetrical massing and simple hip or gable
roof shapes that are characteristic of Colonial
Revivalism.
 |
 |
 |
| Villalonga-Alexander House
(1901) |
Walter Brem House (1903) |
William Henry Belk House
(1925) |
Hook also rejected
Victorian ornamentation in commercial and public buildings.
The oldest extant non-residential structure in Charlotte that C. C.
Hook designed is the Seaboard Air Line
Railroad Passenger Station. There is nothing Victorian
about it. It is instructive to compare the Seaboard Station
with architect Frank Milburn's Spanish Mission style Southern
Railroad Station that stood on West Trade St.
 |
 |
| Seaboard Air Line Railroad
Passenger Station (1896) This is the oldest C. C. Hook
designed non -residential building still standing in
Charlotte. It is truly a remarkable design for its
day. A simple hip roof, regularly punctuated
fenestration, and a general lack of ornamentation mark this
building as essentially classical in form.
|
Frank Milburn's Southern
Railroad Station was almost ten years younger than the
Seaboard Station. Its design philosophy appears less
"up-to-date" than that used in the Seaboard Station.
That because it was not Colonial Revival. It emulated
the look of a Spanish Mission. On a visit to
Charlotte President Wilson reportedly once asked if the
building was fireproof. When the answer was "yes," the
President allegedly said, "That's a pity." The
building was demolished in the early
1960s. |
| The
emergence and enduring popularity of the Colonial Revival
style have added grace and beauty to Charlotte-Mecklenburg's
built or man-made environment. Neighborhoods like
Dilworth, Myers
Park, and Eastover
bear dramatic testimony to this truth. Also, just as
with any other type of architecture, Colonial Revivalism
should be appreciated as a distinctive phase in the evolution
of the building arts. But, at least in this writer's
opinion, the public's affection for designs that draw their
inspiration from America's grand homes of the 18th century has
made the job of the historic preservationists more difficult
in Charlotte and elsewhere.
Not a few people believe that preservationists
should only be concerned about saving aesthetically pleasing
buildings and that anything other than traditional designs are
ugly and dispensable. This writer remembers talking
several years ago with a woman about the wisdom of preserving
mill houses. She was dumbfounded. "Why," she asked,
"should we try to preserve an ugly thing like
that?"
 |
 |
| A lot of people reject the
spending of money on restoring mill houses. This
one stands on Mercury Street in North
Charlotte. |
Imagine what
some people thought when they saw this shotgun
house being hauled up McDowell St. on its way to be
restored? | |
Another difficulty arising from a love of Colonial
Revivalism is a lack of appreciation or outright rejection of
Modern architecture. This aversion sometimes produces
what preservationists derisively call "facadamies," the
remaking of the outer walls of buildings to make them look
more traditional. The most obvious local example of this
technique is what happened to the Charlotte Public
Library on North Tryon Street. Designed by A.
G. Odell, Jr. in the 1950s, the building was noted as an
especially sensitive example of Modernism. That is true
no more. The library has been expanded and done over to
make it look like it was built "a long time ago."
 |
 |
| Odell designed the
Charlotte Library to be open to sunlight. He also
was determined to save two large trees. |
Here is
the building after it was "improved." The walls
have been bricked up. The colors are more
subdued. Do you like it
better?
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