1. Name and location of the property: The property known as the
Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House is located at 7314 Mt. Holly-Huntersville
Road in the Long Creek Community of Mecklenburg County.
2. Name, address, and telephone number of the present owner of the
property: The present owner of the property is:
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 maps that depict the location of the property.
5. Current Deed Book Reference to the Property: The most recent
deed to Tax Parcel Number 033-141-08 is found in Deed Book 10151, page 145.
6. A brief historical sketch of the property: This report contains
a brief historical sketch of the property by Marilyn Croteau and Dr. Dan L.
Morrill.
7. A brief architectural sketch of the property: This report
contains a brief architectural sketch of the property by Dr. Dan L. Morrill.
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 Commission judges that the property
known as the Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House does possess special
significance in terms of Charlotte-Mecklenburg. The Commission bases its
judgment on the following considerations: 1) the Thomas and Latitia Gluyas
House (c. 1865) is representative of the two-story frame farmhouses built
in rural Mecklenburg County in the post- bellum or New South era and is
reflective of the robust cotton economy that characterized Mecklenburg
County during those years, and 2) Thomas Gluyas, the initial owner, was a
prominent figure in the public affairs of Mecklenburg County in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In addition to superintending
his farm, Gluyas served as a captain in a local militia company during the
Civil War, was a founding member of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, and was
elected to the Mecklenburg County Board of Commissioners and the North
Carolina Legislature.
b. Integrity of design, setting, workmanship, materials, feeling
and/or association: The Commission contends that the attached
architectural description by Dr. Dan L. Morrill demonstrates that the
Thomas and Latitia Gluyas 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 tax value of the
improvements on the property is $116,350. The current appraised tax value of
the 2.15 acres of land is $44,100. The total appraised tax value of the
property is $160,450. The property is zoned R4.
Date of Preparation of this Report: June 14, 1999
Prepared by: Marilyn Croteau and Dr. Dan L. Morrill
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission
2100 Randolph Rd.
Charlotte, NC 28207
Telephone: (704) 376-9115
Architectural Description
Site Description The Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House is located on
approximately 2.6 acres of land on the south side of Mount Holly -
Huntersville Road in the Long Creek community of Mecklenburg County. The
house faces the road and sits atop a slight rise. The front yard is mostly
wooded, and the rear yard is essentially an open lawn. A dirt driveway of
recent origin extends from the road to the side yard immediately west of the
house. Just to the west of the driveway is a frame, gable-roofed garage,
most likely dating from the first half of the twentieth century. A stone
sidewalk leads from the original driveway (now replaced) to the front of the
house. A new residential subdivision surrounds the site and occupies the
land once devoted to farming.
Building Descriptions
The Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House is a three-bay-wide by two-bay-deep
frame building with a
gable roof of asphalt shingles and single- shouldered end chimneys in
brick with stone foundations and simple corbelled caps. A large, one-story,
gable-roofed addition, dating from c. 1900, projects from the rear of the
house. A
shed-roofed porch supported by chamfered wooden posts resting upon
granite blocks extends across the north elevation of the house. A
shed-roofed porch of recent origin extends across the south elevation of the
rear addition, and a small stoop of no historical significance is located
near the rear of the west elevation of the rear addition. Two brick chimneys
with arched tops protrude through the asphalt-shingled roof of the rear
addition. None of the original windows of the house survives, and the only
distinctive door leading to the outside is the front door. It has a single
light above and three raised wooden panels below. The entire house is
covered with asbestos shingles, most likely added in the mid-twentieth
century.
The interior of the Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House is uncomplicated in
format and design. The predominant wall and ceiling covering is flush board.
A wide center hall with hardwood floors and wooden pegs for hanging clothes
extends from the front to the rear of the house. A
stairway rises in a straight run from the hallway to the second floor.
It has simple wooden
newels, unadorned rectangular pickets, and a rustic, wooden
handrail. The second story has two bedrooms and a center hall with wide
board flooring -- older than the hardwood floors found on the first floor.
The house contains five fireplaces. All have a single attached shelf and
restrained fireplace surrounds. Parts of the original rear porch on the
addition have been enclosed for a modern bathroom and a modern kitchen. On
balance, the Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House was built to meet the
functional needs of a farming family. There is nothing pretentious or fancy
about it. It is, however, an important part of the rural heritage of the
Long Creek community, which is experiencing rapid and largely insensitive
suburban development.
Summary Statement of Significance
The Thomas and Latitia Gluyas House possesses local historic significance
in the areas of Agriculture and Public Affairs. Built c. 1865 in the Long
Creek Community, the Gluyas House is a manifestation of the flourishing
cotton economy of Mecklenburg County during the so-called New South era of
the late nineteenth century. With the establishment of the
Charlotte Cotton Mills in 1881, Charlotte and Mecklenburg County began
to experience rapid industrial growth, especially in textiles. Mecklenburg
farmers found ready markets for cotton, both locally and regionally; and
those like Thomas Gluyas, who had the ability and the resources to take
advantage of this expanding economic opportunity, prospered. Thomas Gluyas
was a prominent figure in the public affairs of Mecklenburg County in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In addition to superintending
his farm, Gluyas served as a captain in a local militia regiment during the
Civil War, was a founding member of
St. Mark's Episcopal Church, and was elected to the Mecklenburg County
Board of Commissioners and the North Carolina Legislature.
Historical Overview
The Captain Thomas Gluyas House was built c. 1865 in the Long Creek
Community of Mecklenburg County. Thomas Gluyas (1826-1912), was its initial
owner. The second son of John Gluyas (1796-1858), an experienced mining
engineer from Cornwall, England, and Mary Bennetts Gluyas (1801-1876),
Thomas Gluyas had accompanied his mother and father to the United States in
1837, when he was only eleven years old. In 1838 the family moved to
Mecklenburg County, where John Gluyas became an official of the Mecklenburg
Gold Mining Company and oversaw the steam-powered machinery at the Capp's
Hill Gold Mine off Beatties Ford Road. 1
In the 1840's Thomas Gluyas went to Jamestown, N.C. (near Greensboro) and
became an apprentice to a gunsmith. 2 It was there that he met
and married Latitia Beeson Gluyas (1831-1909). 3 Thomas and his
young wife returned to Mecklenburg County about 1850 and established their
residence on his father's farm. In May, 1860, Thomas purchased a moderate
size tract of land consisting of 220 acres on what is now the Mount Holly
Huntersville Road and set about having his own home erected. 4 In
subsequent years he bought adjoining land, bringing the size of his farm to
440 acres at the time of his death. 5
The Gluyas Farm prospered during the years following the Civil War and
continued to be active agriculturally well into the early part of the
twentieth century. The principal cash crops were corn and cotton. Thomas
Gluyas participated and prospered in the expanding cotton economy of
Mecklenburg County during the so-called New South era of the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. Historian Thomas W. Hanchett notes that after
the Civil War "the Southern attitude toward industry changed radically."
"The end of slavery crippled plantation agriculture," he explains, "and the
region's investors began to work toward a 'New South' based instead on
industrial development." 6 The expansion of the textile economy
of Mecklenburg County was nothing short of spectacular. "Cotton was not an
easy crop to grow in Mecklenburg County," writes preservation consultant
Sherry Joines. "In fact, only 6,112 bales were ginned in 1860. However,
after the discovery of the fertilizer, Peruvian guano, the production
rapidly increased to 19,129 bales in 1880. The production of cotton peaked
in 1910 with 27, 466 bales." "Thus, between 1860 and 1880," says Joines,
"the image, economy, and lifestyle of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County
changed dramatically." 7 An additional stimulus to the local
cotton economy was provided by the establishment of a substantial number of
textile mills in Mecklenburg County during the New South years. 8
Clearly, these developments brought new challenges and opportunities to
local farmers. Among them was the rapid growth of the city of Charlotte,
which placed greater pressure on farmers to supply the more diversified
needs of Charlotte's increasing populace and burgeoning textile industry.
Successful farmers like Thomas Gluyas learned that they had to specialize in
order to maintain a profit. In addition, the growing demand for products
meant that expensive machinery replaced beasts of burden; and as land also
grew more costly, losses were felt more intensely. Many farmers in
Mecklenburg County could not keep up with these new financial and
technological demands. Those like Gluyas who could, saw their incomes
increase substantially.
In addition to members of the family, African American tenants lived and
worked on the Gluyas farm. The farm contained the Thomas Gluyas House,
tenant houses, a log outbuilding, a log kitchen house, a log smokehouse,
barns for hay and animals, and a cotton gin. Across the road stood a
gunsmith shop. The shop was used to craft rifles and repair them. Long
rifles are now recognized as an early American art form that had reached the
height of artistic form and function between 1776 and 1830. The only
buildings that survive are the Thomas Gluyas House, one tenant house on
adjacent land currently being developed, and the log smokehouse, which was
moved in 1998 to nearby property owned by John O. Gluyas III.
Thomas Gluyas was active in public affairs and was recognized by local
citizens as a leader in his community. During and after the Civil War, he
was known locally as "Captain Thomas Gluyas." He remained on his farm during
the Civil War, but like most men who stayed behind he served in a local
militia group. He was a Captain in the 86th Regiment North Carolina Militia,
under Colonel B. G. Brown.9 He had the unenviable job of
arresting persons liable to Conscription Law and all soldiers absent from
their regiments without leave. Thomas Gluyas was one of the founders of
St. Mark's Episcopal Church. In 1883, he joined with a group of Long
Creek residents who were attending
Hopewell Presbytarian Church. Dissatisfied with strict Calvinism, the
disgruntled Presbyterians wanted to start an Episcopal Church Mission in the
Long Creek community. Although Thomas Gluyas had no formal religious
affiliations, he was attracted to the Episcopal Church because of his
English ancestry. On October 25, 1884, the day the Church was formally
organized, he was appointed, Treasurer. 10 St. Mark's Church was
built on Mt. Holly Huntersville Road not far from the Gluyas Farm. Thomas &
Latitia Gluyas are buried in the church cemetery along with many descendents
of their family.11
In 1874, Thomas Gluyas was elected to serve a four year term on the
Mecklenburg County Board of Commissioners, under the chairmanship of T. L.
Vail. In 1890, he was approached by T. L. Vail to run for the State Senate
representing the Prohibition Party. He declined. 12 However, he
was elected in 1903, at the age of 77, to the North Carolina Legislature,
and served one term representing Mecklenburg County. 13
Thomas and Latitia Gluyas had five children -- four daughters and one
son. Two daughters , Mary (1850-1919) and Nancy Alice (1853-1925) were both
born before Thomas and Latitia Gluyas established their residence on Mt.
Holly Huntersville Road. Martha Addie May (1858-1903) was the first of
Thomas's children to be born on the Gluyas Farm. According to family papers
Martha was born in the "old log house by the spring on this place". In 1863,
John Oliver , the fourth child, was born "in the old log kitchen house in
the yard here". First indication that Thomas built or moved his family into
a farmhouse was the birth of Lelia, (1868-1960). Family notes indicate "Aunt
Lelia was born in this house". 14
Three generations of the Gluyas family lived in the Thomas Gluyas House
until 1995. The 400 plus acres of land owned by Thomas in 1912 were
subdivided into five tracts. His wife Latitia Beeson Gluyas had preceded him
in death in 1909. The estate was therefore inherited by his four surviving
children, Mary McCoy, Nancy Parks, John Oliver Gluyas, Lelia Gresham, and
the heirs of his daughter Addie May (Craven), who had also preceded him in
death.. His son, John Oliver Gluyas (1863-1912), died unexpectedly just 10
days after his father of complications from an emergency appendectomy, at
age 49. 15 His wife Sallie (Whitely) Gluyas and eight of their
dependent children inherited the "home tract" of 85 acres including the
Thomas Gluyas House. 16
The Gluyas Family
Sallie Gluyas never remarried. She oversaw the operation of the farm
until her death in 1944, at age 83. Sallie and John Gluyas had ten children,
all of whom were reared on the Gluyas Farm. Four of the six daughters never
married. After completing their education and working outside of the home,
three daughters returned to Long Creek to live in the Thomas Gluyas House.
Lucy, (1888-.1974) after attending Normal School in Greensboro (now the
University of North Carolina ñGreensboro) taught in Florida for a brief
period and then worked for many years for the Mecklenburg County Board of
Education. Julia (1901-1973), a registered nurse, studied in Chicago, worked
at Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte, as well as Wayne County Memorial in
Goldsboro, North Carolina. Alice Josephine (1903- 1995) attended Art School
in Philadelpia and worked as a salesperson at Iveys Department Store in
Charlotte. Lelia Gluyas Gresham (1868-1960), youngest daughter of Thomas and
an aunt to Lucy, Julia and Josephine, returned to live at the family
homestead from Richmond, Virginia after the death of her husband. She was
cared for by her nieces until her death in 1960. Alice Josephine lived alone
with the aid of outside help for more than twenty years on the property,
until her death in 1995. She relied on her nephew, John Oliver Gluyas III,
who lived across the street to assist with the upkeep of the property.
17 In 1998, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission
purchased the Thomas Gluyas House and approximately 2 acres of land. The
property is now being offered for sale.
1 Gluyas Family Papers, unpublished, "Reminiscences of Captain
Thomas Gluyas" as dictated to his granddaughter Lucy Gluyas in 1911.
2 Whisker, James, Gunsmiths of the Carolinas, 1660-1870
.
3 Guilford County Marriage Bond 55670, February 18, 1847.