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Chapter Ten
The New South Elite In Control
Dr. Dan L. Morrill
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
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David Ovens |
David Ovens exhibited the best qualities of
Charlotte's New South elite. As early as 1912, when he had
headed a fundraising campaign to build a new YWCA, Ovens had
begun to establish himself as a prominent local philanthropist.
Ovens was president of the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce ,
which was established in 1915 as the successor to the Greater
Charlotte Club. He was president of the Good Fellows Club , a
charitable organization that had its origins in Second
Presbyterian Church . "The chief value of this club lies not in
its charitable work alone, but in acquainting five hundred men
with the other side of life apart from our palatial clubs,
luxurious homes, trips to Florida in winter and to Europe, or
expensive resorts in Newport or Bar Harbor in the summer," Ovens
declared. He headed Charlotte's first Community Chest Drive,
forerunner of today's United Way. Ovens was the local chairman
of the American Red Cross during World War II and served on the
boards of several other prestigious Charlotte-Mecklenburg
institutions, including Queens College , Davidson College , and
Presbyterian Hospital . The list of his civic contributions goes
on and on. Like many wealthy Charlotteans, Ovens also had a home
at Blowing Rock, North Carolina. It still overlooks the 13th
fairway of the golf course of the Blowing Rock Country Club.
Ovens was
a member of the delegation that traveled to Washington, D.C. in
July 1917 to lobby for the establishment of a World War One
military training camp in Charlotte. Much as Dr. Charles J. Fox
, James W. Osborne , and William Johnston had done in the late
1840s, Ovens and his compatriots were seeking to stimulate the
local economy through the introduction of new infrastructure.
They too were successful. General Leonard Wood , commander of
the Army's Department of the Southeast, visited Charlotte on
July 5, 1917. Wood toured "the site offered on the southwest of
the city." "Over and over this site," The Charlotte Observer
reported, "went the party, inspecting the topography of the
land, the streams, wooded sections, roads, and all else."
Members of General Wood's staff were "charmed with several
particularly high knolls, which afforded excellent places for
the location of headquarters."
The
Charlotte Chamber of Commerce raised thousands of dollars of
private money to purchase a sufficient amount of land to
accommodate the needs of the U. S. Army. Named Camp Greene in
honor of Nathanael Greene of Revolutionary War fame, the
massive facility, containing approximately 2000 buildings on
2340 acres of land, opened just to the southwest of town by the
end of August 1917. Some 60,000 soldiers, many from New
England, also later textile executive and Forsyth County native
Harry Dalton, would eventually train at Camp Greene -- about as
many people as then resided in Charlotte.
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Scene of Camp Greene |
The
initial headquarters for Camp Greene were located in the James
C. Dowd House , which still stands on Monument Avenue off
Wilkinson Boulevard. The most tragic events at Camp Greene
occurred during the Winter of 1918-1919, when a worldwide
Spanish Influenza epidemic swept into Charlotte. Susie Harwood VanLandingham received a personal commendation from President
Woodrow Wilson for her supervision of the Red Cross Canteen at
Camp Greene. She remembered visiting the Spanish Mission style
Southern Railroad Station on West Trade Street and seeing rows
of coffins waiting to be loaded on trains headed for New England
and elsewhere.
David
Ovens is best remembered as a lover of the arts. One of his
favorite civic responsibilities was serving for eighteen years,
from 1934 until 1952, as president of the Community Concert
Association. His job was to bring excellent professional actors
and musicians to perform in Charlotte. The problem was that the
city had no building that could meet even the minimum
performance requirements of artists during the 1930's and
1940's. Founded in 1932, the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra played
its initial concerts at Alexander Graham Junior High School on
East Morehead Street before moving to the auditorium at Piedmont
High School and then to the Armory Auditorium on Cecil Street,
later Kings Drive. There was a time," remembered Ovens, "when
the old Armory was becoming so shabby that people didn't want to
go to artistic events there, and the attendance fell off."
A man of
conservative tastes, Ovens detested modern architecture and
modern art. "Everyone should be allowed to have one pet peeve,"
he proclaimed. "Mine is modern architecture." He spoke with
special disdain about "those straight up-and-down, steel-ribbed,
glass-enclosed structures that are more in keeping with the
design of a small-town factory, or parking garage." Ironically,
the Charlotte landmark that bears his name, Ovens Auditorium on
East Independence Boulevard , is just such a building. It was
fashioned by Charlotte architect A. G. Odell, Jr ., whom Ovens
called a "good friend."
Ovens
played the pivotal role in securing public backing for Ovens
Auditorium , originally called the Civic Center, and the
Charlotte Coliseum , now Independence Arena. On October 27,
1949, Mayor Victor Shaw selected Ovens to head a planning
committee to select a site for the new facility and to recommend
an architect. Shaw described Ovens as "the most public-spirited
citizen that Charlotte had ever known."
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Ovens Auditorium and Charlotte
Coliseum |
Determined that Charlotte would have a cultural and
entertainment facility worthy of its status, Ovens and his
fellow members on the planning committee pushed ahead with their
agenda. In May 1950, City Council approved the committee's
recommendation that A. G. Odell, Jr . be the architect. The
voters of Charlotte went to the polls on October 14, 1950, and
gave their backing for bonds to acquire the land and build a new
auditorium and a new coliseum. The Charlotte Coliseum and Ovens
Auditorium were completed in 1955. David Ovens attended the
official dedication ceremonies on September 11th. Not
surprisingly, the featured speaker was evangelist and native son
Dr. Billy Graham . David Ovens died almost exactly two years
later, on September 9, 1957.
![[Portrait of James B. Duke]](jb_duke.jpg) |
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James B. Duke |
Myers
Park 's most powerful and influential resident was the noted
industrialist and philanthropist James Buchanan Duke . On March
8, 1919, Duke purchased the Colonial Revival style home that
architect C. C. Hook had designed in 1915 for utilities
executive Z. V. Taylor and his wife, Irving Scales Taylor.
Duke assembled twelve parcels of property to form an estate in
excess of 15 acres. Between 1919 and 1922 he transformed the
already-substantial house which the Taylors had built into a
majestic mansion of 45 rooms and 12 baths. This was the only
house that Duke owned in North Carolina during the years of his
greatest power and influence. He called it
Lynnwood.
Duke owned a house (Rough Point) in Newport, Rhode Island, a
townhouse on 5th Avenue in New York City, and maintained his
legal residence on a 2600 acre estate in Somerset County, New
Jersey.
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Lynnwood or White Oaks |
Apparently, two considerations were uppermost in causing Duke
to purchase the property in Charlotte. First, business
activities compelled him to spend extended periods of time in
the city. Second, he wanted to expose his one and only child,
Doris Duke , to the "ins and outs" of Southern life.
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Dr. Walker Gill Wylie |
In 1904,
James B. Duke met Dr. W. Gill Wylie , a physician in New York
City, who had joined with his brother in 1899 in launching the
Catawba Power Company of Fort Mill, South Carolina, the first
hydroelectric production venture on the Catawba River . Duke
suggested that he form a partnership with the Wylie Brothers so
that capital for expansion could be committed to the enterprise.
The financially beleaguered Wylie Brothers readily accepted,
thereby assuring the establishment of the Southern Power Company
, later Duke Power Company . Prompting Duke to enter this field
was his belief that the economy of North Carolina would achieve
its potential only if sufficient power was available to sustain
an expanding textile manufacturing component. The early history
of the Southern Power Company proved that Duke was correct. The
harnessing of the Catawba River allowed the textile industry to
prosper in the Piedmont and was the single most important factor
in stimulating the industrial growth of this region in the first
half of the twentieth century.
That James
Buchanan Duke took considerable delight in his accomplishment
seems certain. It is not unreasonable to assume that Duke
regarded Lynnwood as a symbol of his success in the
hydro-electrical business. In any case, the most memorable
feature of the estate was an enormous fountain, which according
to some sources propelled water to a height of 150 feet. A
favorite weekend excursion for Charlotteans was to park nearby
and watch the huge column of water spray into the air. Ben Dixon
MacNeill, staff writer for the Raleigh News and Observer
, commented that Duke took "spontaneous pride" in 3 things --
his Rolls Royce, his daughter, and his fountain in Charlotte.
The most
significant event in Lynnwood 's history occurred in December
1924. A series of meetings in the sunroom in the west wing of
the house culminated in the establishment of the Duke Endowment
, a philanthropic enterprise of enormous importance to the
people of North Carolina and South Carolina. Local institutions
such as Johnson C. Smith University , formerly Biddle Memorial
Institute , and Davidson College received substantial
bequests. Furman College in South Carolina and North Carolina's
Trinity College, which changed its name to Duke University, were
also benefactors of Duke's philanthropy.
In this
writer's opinion, one can gain instructive insights into the
assertive and tenacious character of Duke and the other New
South leaders of his era by visiting the Duke University Campus
and viewing the statue of Duke that stands in front of the
magnificent Gothic Revival style Duke Chapel. The bronze figure
is 8 feet, 4 inches tall and sits on a 25-ton Cape Anne granite
pedestal. The inscription reads: "James Buchanan Duke ,
December 23, 1856-October 10, 1925. Industrialist,
Philanthropist, Founder of the Duke Endowment ." James B. Duke
's final consuming interest was building Duke University. As he
lay dying, one of his last recorded statements was "Don't bother
me, nurse. Today, I am laying out the university grounds."
James Buchanan Duke died at his home in Somerville, New Jersey.
Cameron
Morrison was another prominent and influential resident of
Myers Park . He lived on Queens Road until he and his second
wife, Sara Eckerd Watts Morrison, moved to their suburban farm
named Morrcroft in 1927. A native of Richmond County, Morrison
was an adroit and flamboyant politician. His initial forays into
the public arena occurred in the 1890s, when as a young attorney
he headed the White Supremacist Red Shirt movement in Richmond
County. The only elective office that Morrison held during
these years was as Mayor of Rockingham, North Carolina, in 1893.
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Cameron Morrison |
Morrison
moved his law practice to Charlotte in 1905. The Charlotte
Observer described him as a young man of ability who
possessed a clear, musical voice. On December 6, 1905,
Morrison married Lottie May Tomlinson of Durham, North
Carolina, who was to be the mother of an only child, Aphelia
Lawrence Morrison. Lottie Morrison died in Presbyterian
Hospital on November 12, 1919. A graduate of the Women's
College of Baltimore, Maryland, and Peace Institute in Raleigh,
North Carolina, Lottie Morrison had been active in local civic
affairs. During World War I she had served as captain of a Red
Cross canteen team at Camp Greene .
In 1920,
Morrison opposed O. Max Gardner , Lieutenant Governor of North
Carolina, in the Democratic primary for Governor. A principal
ally of Morrison's in this campaign was Senator Furnifold
Simmons , long-time leader of the Democrat Party. Morrison was
victorious; and in January 1921, he became the Governor of North
Carolina. In an address that he delivered on January 28, 1921,
Governor Morrison exhibited the progressive and assertive spirit
that was to characterize his administration. Indeed, his
verbiage was vintage New South Boosterism.
"We do not want to move and have our being as a crippled, weak
and halting State, but we want to stand up like a mighty giant
of progress and go forward in the upbuilding of our State and
the glorification of our God."
It was
customary for the chief executives of North Carolina to make
bold promises at the outset of their terms, but Cameron Morrison
did a better than average job in fulfilling his pledge to the
people. He is remembered best as the "Good Roads Governor." To
bring North Carolina "out of the mud," Morrison secured funds
for a massive road-building program. His objective was to
construct paved highways to every county seat in the state.
Governor Morrison also labored to upgrade the educational system
throughout North Carolina. Allocations to the public
institutions of higher learning were increased substantially
during his administration. For example, fourteen buildings were
erected on the campus of the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill between 1921 and 1925, the years during which he
served as Governor. Moreover, Morrison committed financial
resources to the establishment of excellent primary and
secondary schools at the local level. Another of Morrison's
major accomplishments was the improvement of medical facilities,
especially those involved in the treatment of the mentally and
emotionally infirm.
In
keeping with his Jeffersonian proclivities, Morrison believed
that the existence of an educated citizenry was indispensable to
the survival of the American republic. Indeed, he believed that
those African American citizens who could demonstrate their
ability to grasp and appreciate public issues should be
permitted to exercise the full rights of citizenship.
Illustrative of Governor Morrison's position on this matter was
the fact that he channeled substantial resources to the
improvement of the black colleges of North Carolina. Also
noteworthy is the fact that the poll tax was eliminated during
his administration.
On
December 13, 1930, Governor O. Max Gardner surprised many
political pundits by appointing Morrison to the United States
Senate to serve out the term of Senator Lee S. Overman , who had
recently died. In 1932, however, Morrison was unsuccessful in
his campaign against Robert R. Reynolds , an Asheville attorney.
Reynolds used his opponent's wealth as an effective political
and oratorical weapon, accusing Governor Morrison of eating
caviar and using a gold spittoon. In 1942, the voters of the
Tenth Congressional District elected Morrison to the House of
Representatives. He did not run for reelection. Instead, he
campaigned in 1944 to return to the United States Senate. Again,
he was unsuccessful, this time losing to Clyde R. Hoey of
Shelby, North Carolina.
Governor
Morrison did not run for public office again. His involvement in
politics did not abate, however. He headed the North Carolina
delegation to the National Convention of the Democrat Party in
Chicago in 1952. His speech urging the delegates to preserve
party unity appeared on national television. That Governor
Morrison practiced what he preached was affirmed by the fact
that he supported enthusiastically the candidacy of Adlai
Stevenson for the Presidency. Indeed, the last political speech
of his career, delivered at Freedom Park in Charlotte, echoed
the same devotion to the Democrat Party that he had espoused as
a young attorney in Richmond County in the 1890's.
"Of course there have been actions taken by Democratic
Administrations of which I have not wholly approved. Of course,
there have been, and still are, individuals within the
Democratic Party whom I would much rather have seen elsewhere.
But we must never let anything swerve us from the only honorable
course, and that is the true loyalty to the Democratic Party,
now, as in the past, and forever."
Governor
Cameron Morrison died on August 21, 1953, of a heart attack at
the age of eighty-three. His imposing home remains in
Charlotte.
Click
here to see.
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Ben Douglas |
Mayor
Ben Douglas had a house on Malvern Road in Myers Park . Like
so many other New South leaders of Charlotte in the first half
of the twentieth century, including Ovens, Duke, and Morrison,
and for that matter Tompkins and Latta of an earlier generation,
Douglas was not a native. Born in Iredell County, Douglas moved
to Charlotte from Gastonia in the mid-1920s and established a
funeral home at the corner of Fox Street and Elizabeth Avenue,
now Independence Boulevard and Elizabeth Avenue. Older
Charlotteans have vivid memories of the Douglas and Sing
Mortuary, especially the green awning that extended all the way
from the front door to the curb.
A
tireless and adroit politician, Douglas was Mayor from 1935
until 1941, and earned the reputation of being the "Builder of
Modern Day Charlotte." Douglas loved the drama and passion of
the political arena, and he devoted his enormous energies and
talents to leading the people into what he regarded as a bright
and prosperous future. Born in the 1890s, he reached adulthood
during the "roaring twenties," when it seemed that everybody was
making piles of money in the stock market. Then came the
crippling Depression of the 1930s. Douglas saw himself as a
cheerleader, as an urban booster who would rally the people of
Charlotte and give them hope.
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Original Hangar at
Douglas Airport |
Douglas's
greatest and most enduring contribution to the building up of
Charlotte was his commitment to the establishment of a municipal
airport, which still bears his name. Passenger air service
began here on December 10, 1930, but the Curtis Condor airplane
had to land at a private field. At Mayor Douglas's insistence,
the Charlotte City Council voted on September 3, 1935, to apply
for Federal funds from the Works Progress Administration to
build an airport for Charlotte. When Washington approved the
request on November 13th, the City decided to use the money for
land acquistion. Voter-approved bonds were sold on March 1,
1936, to pay for the improvements, including the terminal and
the hangar. "Hundreds of unemployed men, bundled in overcoats,
stood in line for the first WPA jobs, which consisted of
clearing the site of trees and underbrush," writes historian
Ryan Sumner.
The
original hangar at what is now Charlotte Douglas International
Airport survives. It is located at 4108 Airport Drive and is
the home of the Carolinas Aviation Museum.
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Ben Douglas appointed
J. B. Marshall City Manager in May 1935. Marshall and
Mayor Douglas provided dynamic leadership. |
Douglas
was a prime mover in persuading the War Department to establish
an air station at Charlotte shortly before the entry of the
United States into World War Two. Dedicated on April 21, 1941,
and named Morris Field in honor of William Colb Morris , a
World War One aviator from Concord, North Carolina, the air
station was devoted primarily to the training of pilots and the
maintenance of aircraft. Like Camp Greene during World War
One, Morris Field was a boost to the local economy. "The Army
Air Base at Morris Field became a $6 million government
investment," boasted the Charlotte Observer many
years later. Charlotte architect W. R. Marsh designed the
buildings, and Blythe Brothers Construction Company and Goode
Construction Company, both local firms, built Morris Field.
Charlotte
and Mecklenburg County had two other large military
installations during World War Two. The former Ford Motor
Company Plant on Statesville Avenue became the home of a U. S.
Army Quartermaster Depot on May 16, 1941. Lastly, a committee
of Charlotte businessmen, including Mayor E. M. Currie, R. S.
Dickson, W. Carey Dowd, Jr., and Edwin Jones, orchestrated a
successful campaign to bring a large Naval Ammunition Depot to
Mecklenburg County in 1942. Located in what is now the Arrowood
Industrial Park and operated by the U. S. Rubber Company, the
facility covered over 2200 acres and employed about 10,000
people. "During operations," reported the Charlotte
Observer , the 'shell plant' grew to approximate the size
and activities of a small city." Among those who worked at the
"shell plant" was Dot Cornwell of Lincolnton. Only a year out
of high school, she would board a bus each morning with other
young women for the trip to her job in Mecklenburg County. She
made $27.50 per week, more than twice the pay she had received
as a clerk in a dime store.
The
substantial record of accomplishment of Charlotte's New South
leaders is undeniable. It is difficult to imagine how Charlotte
could have become the economic capital of the two Carolinas
without the contributions of men like David Ovens , James
Buchanan Duke , Cameron Morrison , and Ben Douglas . But just
as incontestable is the fact that their power rested upon a
narrow base and that Charlotte's elite expected the
rank-and-file citizens of Mecklenburg County to be deferential
and obedient.
Textile
executive and philanthropist Harry Dalton kept a dairy during
World War Two. The 1942 volume survives. The entries provide
a fascinating glimpse into the lifestyles and attitudes of
Charlotte's New South leaders of that era. As mentioned
earlier, Dalton had first come to Charlotte from his native
Forsyth County as a young Army private at Camp Greene . An
unpretentious but skillful negotiator, Dalton would eventually
attain substantial wealth and influence. He and his wife were
major benefactors of the Mint Museum of Art.
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Charlotte's Spanish
Mission Style Station. Demolished in 1962. |
In
October 1941, Dalton became the head of the rayon and nylon
division of the War Production Board, which was headquartered in
the nation's capital. Dalton would routinely leave Charlotte
by train from the Southern Railroad Station in Charlotte for
Washington, D.C. on Sunday nights and return the next Friday
mornings and spend the weekends with his wife and two children
at the family home in Myers Park . Sometimes the trip was
arduous. "The trains are crowded these days with people going
to & from Washington," he wrote on January 4, 1942. "There is
hardly any standing room in the club cars." Dalton reported
that the porters became so familiar with his traveling habits
that they had his berth prepared for him when he boarded the
train on Sunday nights at Charlotte's Spanish Mission style
railroad station.
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The Former United
States Mint Building, now Mint Museum of Art. |
Harry
Dalton belonged to the small group of white men who virtually
controlled Charlotte during World War Two. Known as the "Round
Table ," these privileged gentlemen gathered most weekdays at
noon for lunch at the restaurant in Ivey's Department Store. "I
had lunch with the 'Round Table' group today," Dalton declared
on January 2nd. Among the regulars were David Ovens, Henry
Allison, Tom Glasgow, Norman Pease, and Mayor Currie. These men
established a close, interlocking network of business and social
relationships. "This is a rather interesting group of men,"
said Dalton. "Everything from world events to local and
individual items are discussed."
One of
the important bonding rituals for elitist males in Charlotte was
playing golf. It still is. Dalton was an avid golfer and
played most of his rounds at the exclusive Charlotte County Club
, of which he was a member. "I had an 83 today," he wrote on
November 14th. "I played with E. C. Griffith, Claude Cochrane,
Jim Shannonhouse. 83 is fair for an ole man like me who has not
played in two weeks." Another elitist ritual was traveling
together to Chapel Hill or Durham to attend college football
games. It still is. Dalton and about thirty of his friends
boarded a bus at the Charlotte County Club on News Years Day
1942 for a trip to Duke Stadium, where the Rose Bowl was being
held because of apprehension over a possible Japanese air attack
against California. Duke was playing Oregon State. Dalton
reported that one member of the party "felt a little too good."
On the way back on the bus this person "kept pushing people's
hats down over their heads, etc." "We got home about
midnight," said Dalton. "It was an interesting day."
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Charlotte Country Club |
The
prominent white men of Charlotte would also gather at the
Charlotte County Club on special occasions to celebrate and pay
tribute to one another. One such event was a banquet honoring
David Ovens on his seventieth birthday. "Attended dinner tonite
(sic.) to surprise David Ovens on his seventieth birthday,"
Dalton wrote on December 4th. George Ivey read a poem
satirizing Eleanor Roosevelt. "Mr. Ovens does not like the
Roosevelts," said Dalton. Other poems followed including one by
Dalton about tires. Much of Dalton's time in Washington was
spent assuring that enough rayon and nylon were available to
produce tires for the military. Another gathering place for the
privileged whites of Charlotte was the Mint Museum of Art in the
fashionable Eastover neighborhood. "To Mint in afternoon to see
the Strauss Collection of silver & paintings, wrote Dalton on
April 26th.
In his 1942
diary Dalton often referred to World War Two and especially to
the somber course of events in the Pacific Theater. "The
Pacific news is bad," he stated on February 23rd. "The Japs are
winning. Superior in numbers apparently. I hope we can
eventually turn the tide." "The war news is worse from the
Pacific area," he wrote on March 7th. On October 11th he said:
"War all over the world. News not too encouraging." He spoke
about "blackouts" and gas rationing. Dalton frequently attended
farewell parties for prominent young men who were going off to
fight the Germans, the Italians, and the Japanese. " I had
farewell parties with Jimmie Harris. He and Reed Anthony both
going in the Navy," he reported on August 14th. A more lavish
goodbye party was held at the James B. Duke Mansion in Myers
Park on May 2nd for the Charlotte Memorial Hospital Evacuation
Unit. Dalton and his wife Mary were there. "It reminded me of
stories written about the dashing social units leaving the old
plantations during beginnings of the Civil War.," wrote Dalton.
Harry
Dalton , like most wealthy white males of his time, was a man of
substantial accomplishment. On the last pages of his 1942 dairy
he meticulously listed all the business, philanthropic, and
cultural organizations in which he held leadership positions.
Dalton was on the Board of Directors of nine corporations. He
belonged to the Board of Directors of the Charlotte Country
Club, Charlotte Memorial Hospital, Charlotte Chamber of Commerce
, Goodfellows Club, and the Mint Museum of Art . He was on the
Board of Trustees of Queens College and a Deacon at Second
Presbyterian Church . Dalton received no pay for his work for
the War Production Board in Washington, D.C., which regularly
took him away from his home and family.
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| Women did continue to
play a role in public affairs, especially with regard to
public health and public education. This is Mrs. C. C.
Hook, wife of the locally famous architect. A member of
the Charlotte Woman's Club, she was a leader in
establishing a High School Parent-Teachers' Association
in 1915. |
However
impressive or magnanimous his attainments might have been, Harry
Dalton demonstrated little awareness of the advantages that
might accrue from sharing power with rank-and-file Charlotteans,
especially African Americans. Just like D. A. Tompkins and
Edward Dilworth Latta or James B. Duke or any of Charlotte's
New South elite, Dalton believed that everyone would ultimately
benefit from the leadership that only he and his "golf-playing
buddies" could provide. Especially enlightening in this regard
was Dalton's treatment of the black servants who worked in his
Myers Park home. African American women prepared the meals for
his family, not always successfully. "We have no cook: as Cora
Young we let go," he declared on September 25th. Dalton was
peeved when Cora's successor did not come to work even on
Christmas Day. "Our cook . . . did not show up -- sick I
guess." In true paternalistic manner, however, Dalton went out
of his way to assist a substitute cook whom he respected. He
wrote on June 28th:
The
cook (Cora Young) has been on vacation. Julia McKinght, the
nurse and Johnson C. Smith graduate is cooking. She teaches
next year. We are trying to get her located. Mary called Dr.
Harding, Superintendent of Schools. She is ever a conscientious
girl. We hate to lose her but want to encourage her in
bettering herself.
Julia, of
course, taught in a racially segregated school.
As long
as the rank-and-file citizens of Charlotte and Mecklenburg
County recognized their station in life and did nothing to
threaten the economic and social status quo, the wealthy and
powerful elite treated them with characteristic Southern
civility. Harry Dalton was at heart a kind and gentle
person. He and his family attended church almost every
Sunday. He and his wife were devoted parents. "We had a fine
little Easter Egg Hunt in the back yard," wrote Dalton on April
5th. On August 22nd, when her son David celebrated his sixth
birthday, Mary, said Dalton, "had a party of about 40 or more
little boys and girls." But Dalton also understood that
Charlotte's principal goal was always economic development. "I
missed meeting of Chamber of Commerce to get industries for
Charlotte," he declared on March 7th.
Anyone
who wonders what happened when someone defied Charlotte's New
South leaders need only examine the events surrounding the
bloody streetcar strike that erupted in Charlotte in August
1919. The behavior of the executives of the Southern Public
Utilities Company might be compared to a fist in a velvet glove
-- warm and soft on the outside but tough and resolute at the
core. In this instance as in all others, Charlotte's upper
class, when threatened, chose to fight tenaciously to protect
its privileged position; and the elite's ability to remain
steadfast in the face of mounting criticism, to blame their
adversaries for all wrongdoing, and to garner public support in
the end was truly remarkable.
Trouble
began shortly after midnight on Sunday, August 10, 1919. The
motormen and conductors, after negotiations with the Southern
Public Utilities Company had failed, parked the streetcars in
the car barn in Dilworth and voted unanimously to go on
strike. Their aims were to secure a pay increase and to gain
recognition of their union, a local branch of the Amalgamated
Association of Street & Electrical Railway Employees . The
motormen and conductors were anxious to continue negotiating.
"The street car operators of the town will meet the company
officials in conference at any time the company expresses the
desire," union organizer Albert E. Jones announced. The
Charlotte Observer incorrectly predicted that the
strike would soon be settled in a "spirit of fairness and
friendship."
The
president of the Southern Public Utilities Company , which
operated Charlotte's streetcars after 1911, was Zebulon Vance
Taylor , the same man who had just sold his Myers Park Colonial
Revival style home to James B. Duke and one of the men who had
persuaded the U.S Army to locate Camp Greene in Charlotte.
Taylor's position remained unchanged throughout the strike. He
refused to submit to the workers' demands and accused Albert
Jones of being an outside agitator.
Taylor
was condescending in his characterization of the strikers. "We
know our 'boys' too well," he proclaimed on August 12th.
"They are of our blood. They were raised by the same kind of
mother as our mothers." Taylor called the labor unrest
"dastardly, cunning, unfeeling" and insisted that the company
could not afford to raise the pay of the strikers. As for the
union, he agreed to recognize a local union but not one
affiliated with the Amalgamated Association of Street &
Electrical Railway Employees . Just as Latta had done in 1903,
Taylor announced that he would hire and train an entirely new
workforce if the conductors and motormen refused to accept the
company's offer. The trolleys would remain in the barn, said
Taylor, "until the company is enabled to secure car men of this
section qualified to give efficient service."
The
situation worsened when a large, boisterous crowd, composed
mostly of mill workers from North Charlotte, gathered outside
the electric substation on Elizabeth Avenue at Sugar Creek
around midnight on August 12th. The demonstrators had come to
give their support to the local electrical workers who had
struck earlier that day. The electricians were also seeking
higher pay and recognition of their union. Two electricians had
pulled the switches inside the Elizabeth Avenue substation in
the afternoon and had cut off power to the entire city for a
brief period. The police had arrested the pair for
trespassing. Z. V. Taylor feared that the mill workers who had
assembled that night on Elizabeth Avenue would try to seize the
substation and cut the power again. He therefore summoned
the police. Chief Walter B. Orr spoke to the crowd, and the
mill workers went home without further incident.
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Mill Workers from North
Charlotte |
Mayor
Frank R. McNinch called the unauthorized interruption of
electrical power an outrage. "If any men or set of men
challenge the forces of law and order, let them take notice that
they do so at their personal peril," McNinch warned. No doubt
realizing that the misdeeds of a few could be used to discredit
the legitimate aims of the strikers as a whole, Z. V. Taylor
insisted that his company was "standing between the community
and the forces of disorder." According to Taylor, "foreign and
dastardly influences" had caused otherwise "good men" to cut off
electrical service, thereby "jeopardizing the lives of the
suffering in the hospitals." Taylor proclaimed that it was
"high time that this people be aroused as never before in a
century." The Charlotte Observer was more
temperate in its editorial response. "The hope is entertained
by the people of the city as a whole that the slight
unpleasantness yesterday will be given distinction as the one
that will mark the course of the strike toward a peaceable and
satisfactory end," the newspaper declared on August 13th. The
editors also commended Mayor McNinch for his efforts to maintain
"peace and good order."
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Mayor McNinch |
Mayor McNinch summoned representatives of the strikers and Z V Taylor
to City Hall on North Tryon Street in an effort to settle the
escalating dispute. Several sessions were held, but no
agreement was reached on the issue of the recognition of the
union. “We feel that some progress has been made, but the
parties are still far apart and we can only hope that further
conferences may find a basis of settlement acceptable to all,”
announced Mayor McNinch on August 14th. Meanwhile, the Southern
Public Utilities Company escalated tensions by continuing to
place advertisements in the newspaper soliciting applications
for new streetcar workers. "Applications will be received at my
office, beginning Saturday morning," said streetcar
superintendent R. L. Wommack.
By August
15th the Charlotte Observer was growing impatient with
the absence of streetcar service and blamed the continuation of
the strike mainly on the workers., who, the newspaper claimed,
were being coached by a “strike agitator.” The supposed villain
was Albert Jones. In a moment of ill-advised candor, Jones
responded to this criticism by saying: “I have long since
learned that the capitalists who employ Mr. Taylor own the major
part of Charlotte, but only recently I learned that they control
the city hall, the banks, the newspaper, etc.” Charlotte was
not accustomed to such immoderate rhetoric. Mayor McNinch
“denounced the statement of A. E. Jones,” reported the
Charlotte Observer on August 19th. The mayor called Jones's
declaration a "willful and scurrilous lie." Jones later
retracted his statement and apologized.
A meeting
attended by some 2000 people was held at the Mecklenburg County
Courthouse on the night of August 19th to hear the workers' side
of the issue. The principal speaker was Marvin Ritch, a
Charlotte attorney who was active in attempting to organize
local mill hands. Ritch extolled the virtues of unionism and
assured the crowd that textile workers were solidly allied with
the streetcar conductors and motormen. He proceeded to issue a
threat to the Southern Public Utilities Company if it attempted
to operate the trolleys with replacement crews. "Let them run,"
he declared. "The textile workers are so strongly organized
that they will not ride cars operated by 'scabs' and other
people will not take a chance." Jones spoke next. He assured
the strikers that he would not leave Charlotte until their
demands were met. "All the speakers were cheered heartily, but
the cheering came from spots in the crowd and was not by any
means unanimous," said the Charlotte Observer .
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Streetcars in front of
the car barn in Dilworth. |
Motormen
and conductors began picketing in front of the car barn on South
Boulevard. Their primary reasons for doing so was to ascertain
if president Taylor and his associates had decided to bring
strikebreakers to town. Armed clashes were occurring in many
cities of the North, where streetcar strikes were also
occurring. Committees of leading businessmen were appointed to
attempt to end the Charlotte strike peacefully. The Federal
government sent an official of the Department of Labor to town
to try to mediate the dispute. On August 21st, Mayor McNinch
and a citizens committee chaired by Clarence O. Kuester,
nicknamed "Booster Kuester" because of his ardent support for
Charlotte's growth, urged President Taylor to recognize the
Amalgamated Association of Street & Electrical Railway Employees
and the national union of the electricians. ”Mr. Taylor
announced that he could not acquiesce in the agreement,"
reported the Charlotte Observer .
On
Saturday, August 23rd, president Taylor, in direct defiance of
the recommendations of Mayor McNinch and the citizens committee,
stated that the Southern Public Utilities Company would resume
streetcar service on Monday, August 25th with replacement
crews. He also withdrew his earlier offer to give the former
motormen and conductors priority in hiring. "From the beginning
of this unfortunate break," Taylor proclaimed, "our former
employees have seemingly disregarded the counsel of their
friends at home and have followed after a malignant traducer of
their city and its official and its institutions." The
Charlotte Observer announced that service would not
begin immediately to the mill villages of North Charlotte and
Chadwick-Hoskins "because of open threats that have been heard
of disorders, destruction of company property and possible
violence to passengers in these sections."
Mayor
McNinch dispatched a body of policemen to the car barn in
Dilworth on the morning of August 25th to maintain order. A
large crowd of mill workers and strikers gathered along South
Boulevard and hurled insults throughout the day at the
replacement motormen and conductors as each trolley left for
its run along the streets of Charlotte. The trolley crews
carried guns. In mid-afternoon a group of spectators began
throwing stones at a passing streetcar on South Boulevard. The
crew opened fire, and the vandals dispersed. Matters really got
out of hand after dark. A group of North Charlotte residents
moved toward the police, and an officer struck a teenager over
the head with the butt of a gun. The boy was taken to St.
Peter's Hospital and was found not to be seriously injured, but
the incident angered many of the onlookers.
The
frustration of the crowd grew minute by minute. The working
class whites must have realized the utter hopelessness of their
situation. Gunfire erupted outside the car barn about 3 a.m. on
August 26th between the police and the demonstrators. About 100
shots were exchanged. "When the smoke had cleared away," said
the Charlotte Observer , "14 wounded were picked up and
rushed to various hospitals, while Walter F. Pope , the first
man found dead, was sent to the Hovis undertaking
establishment." Four demonstrators were killed, including a
machinist and a railroad engineer. One was mortally wounded in
the abdomen. 14 others were injured, some seriously.
The local
press showed no sympathy for the strikers. "The business
organizations of the city have gone on record against the sort
of unionism that has been imported into the city and there is a
determination that this character of agitation shall be
suppressed," declared the editors of the Charlotte Observer
. Z. V. Taylor and the Southern Public Utilities Company had
won the day. The New South leaders remained firmly in control.
Some of the former motormen and conductors were rehired. The
trolley barn is still in Dilworth , although it was converted
to a bus barn after 1938. At night its corbelled brick walls
have an almost menacing appearance, especially for those who
know that it was here that Charlotte had its bloodiest incident
of labor unrest. Plans are afoot to make the car barn part of a
lavish, upscale development. The wonders of adaptive reuse of
historic buildings shall never cease. |