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The Robert
Potts, Jr. House
This report was written on Mar 2, 1976
1. Name and location of the property: The property known as the
Robert Potts, Jr. House is looted on the Smith Road one-half mile east of
Cornelius, North Carolina in northern Mecklenburg County.
2. Name, addresses, and telephone numbers of the present owners and
occupants of the property: The present owners of the property are:
Mrs. L. Rodney Whisnant (Miriam Smith Whisnant)
P. O. Box 156
Cornelius, North Carolina 28031
Telephone: (704) 892-8251
Mrs. Charles C. Hunter (Lilyan Smith Hunter)
P. O. Box 176
Cornelius, North Carolina 28031
Telephone: (704) 892-8698
3. Representative photographs of the property: Representative
photographs of the property are included in this report.
4. A map depicting the location of the property: This report
contains A Guide to Historic Sites and Buildings taken from The
Plantation World Around Davidson by Dr. Chalmers G. Davidson showing
location of the Robert Potts House. The report also contains a Tax Office
map which indicates the location of the house.
5. Current Deed Book Reference of the property: This report
contains a complete chain of title for the property. Special notice must be
given to the fact that this property has been owned by the Potts family, and
their descendants from purchase of the Land Grant on September 4, 1753,
until the present time. The Parcel Number of the property is 00708103.
6. A brief historical sketch of the property: This report contains
an historical sketch prepared by Dr. Chalmers G. Davidson.
7. A brief architectural description of the property: This report
contains an architectural description prepared by Jack O. Boyte, A. I. A.
8. Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets the
criteria set forth in N. C. G. S. 160A-399.4:
a. Historical and cultural significance: The historical and
cultural significance of the Robert Potts, Jr. House and property rests
upon two factors. First, members of the Potts family have contributed
greatly to the historical development of Mecklenburg County. Second, the
house and the surrounding outbuildings and facilities are of substantial
local architectural significance and form one of the richest sources of
historical artifacts in Mecklenburg County.
b. Suitability for preservation and restoration: The house
contains many of the original furnishings. Moreover, while having been
modified to meet the demands of a contemporary lifestyle, the house
retains many of its initial architectural features. The house should
therefore be maintained in its present state of preservation. Some of the
outbuildings are in need of repair.
c. Educational value: The structure has been featured in several
books dealing with historic houses in Mecklenburg County. This fact
attests to the educational value of the property. The educational value of
the house rests upon its historical and cultural significance to
Mecklenburg County.
d. Cost of acquisition, restoration, maintenance, or repair: The
Commission has no intention of purchasing the property. Indeed, the
Commission knows of no inclination of the present owners to sell. The
house is in an excellent state of repair. Some of the outbuildings are in
need of attention. However, the Commission assumes that the owner of the
property will pay all expenses associated with the preservation,
maintenance, and restoration of the property.
e. Possibilities for adaptive or alternative uses of the property:
As noted above, the Commission believes that the house and property should
not be adapted to an alternative use. However, if the owners should wish
to sell the property at some future date, the house and property could
serve as an farm museum.
f. Appraised value: The 1975 appraised value of the house itself
is $7250.00. The appraised value of the land is $64670.00. The Commission
is aware that designation of the property would allow the owner to apply
for a special property tax classification.
g. The administrative and financial responsibility of any person or
organization willing to underwrite all or a portion of such costs: As
indicated earlier, the Commission has no intention of purchasing this
property. Furthermore, the Commission assumes that all costs associated
with the structure and property will be met by whatever party now owns or
will own the property.
9. Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets the
criteria established for inclusion on the National Register: The
Commission recognizes that the National Register of Historic Places was
established to single out and to provide protection for properties of local
and State historic significance. The evidence generated by this report and
the data provided by the comprehensive inventory of the pre-1900 built
environment performed by the Commission convince the Commission that the
Robert Potts, Jr. House does meet the criteria of the National Register of
Historic Places. Clearly, the Robert Potts, Jr. house is of local historic
significance because of the accomplishments of the Potts family and because
of the architectural merit of the structure.
10. Documentation of why and in what ways the property is of
historical importance to Charlotte and/or Mecklenburg County: The
Commission believes that the Robert Potts, Jr. House is significant to the
history of Mecklenburg County because of its architectural merit and because
of the historical accomplishments of the Potts family. Detailed
documentation in support of both contentions is contained in the historical
sketch prepared by Dr. Chalmers G. Davidson and in the architectural
description prepared by Mr. Jack O. Boyte, A.I.A.
CHAIN OF TITLE
1. Original Land Grant dated the 11th of April, 1752 George II conveyed
to John Brevard 636 Acres in Anson County on the headwaters of Rocky River.
N.C. Land Grant XI, 4-5 Original document in possession of present owners.
2. John Brevard to John Potts dated the 4th day of September, 1753 by
lease and release 636 Acres in Anson County. Book C-1, Page 226
3. John Potts conveyed to son, Robert Potts, Sr. on January 16, 1770 636
Acres in Mecklenburg County, N.C. Register of Deeds Book 7, Page 255.
4. Robert Potts, Sr. conveyed to son, Robert Potts. Jr. On July 24, 1811
a tract of 96 Acres called a "deed of gift". Mecklenburg County Register of
Deeds Book 20, Page 130.
5. Robert Potts. Jr. conveyed to son, Thomas Espy Potts January 20, 1848
by Will Clerk of Superior Court Will Book J Pages 76,77.
6. Thomas Espy Potts Heirs conveyed to son, William Robert Potts on
October 20, 1898. Mecklenburg County Register of Deeds Book 127, Page 452.
7. William Robert Potts conveyed to Nephew, Clifton Eugene Smith on
December 11, 1946 by Will Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court Will
Book 5, Page 327.
8. Clifton Eugene Smith conveyed to Daughters, Miriam Smith Whisnant and
Lilyan Reid Smith Hunter by Will dated August 15, 1969 Mecklenburg County
Clerk of Superior Court Roll 69-47, Frame 648.
Historical Overview
Dr. Chalmers G. Davidson
On September 4, 1753, John Potts, planter, received by "lease and
release" from John Brevard for the sum of 40 pounds sterling, a grant
containing 636 acres of land in Anson County and duly recorded in Book C-1,
Page 226, "lying and being on the headwaters of Rocky River, adjoining
Robert Brevard and others." -- This being the tract granted to John Brevard
by George II dated April 11, 1752, and recorded in North Carolina Land
Grants XI, Pages 4,5, and 18. Early records indicate that John Potts was one
of the earliest pioneers in this area having come here in the migration with
the Scotch Irish through Virginia into North Carolina and lived on the tract
of land before obtaining and recording his land grant. John Potts was a
member of the Potts families who had long been residents of the colonies in
Maryland and later Chester County, Pa., in the 1720's and 1730's. He was a
relative of Isaac Potts of Valley Forge, Pa. (whose home Gen. Washington
used as headquarters) and of John Potts of Potts Grove near Pottstown, Pa.
John Potts and his wife, Geals, were also owners of land granted in the
Fourth Creek settlement of Rowan County by the Honorable John Earl Granville
for 580 acres dated January 3, 1761, and recorded in Vol. IV Part II, Pages
900, 901. A map identifying the land holdings of the Fourth Creek settlers
is found in Rowan County records and has been published in Carolina Cradle
by Robert Ramsey. There is, however, no evidence that John Potts ever
resided on this grant of land. He and his wife, Geals, deeded this tract to
their son, William, by Deed dated April 18, 1764, Recorded Book 6, Pages
74-76, in Rowan County.
The 636 acre Grant in Anson County (by this time known as Mecklenburg
County) was given by "Deed of Gift" and Will from John Potts to his "beloved
son, Robert" on January 16, 1770. Robert Potts married Elizabeth McKeown and
were parents of nine children. He was cited on three occasions for his
"Patriotic Aid" during the Revolutionary War and owned 10 slaves recorded in
the 1790 Census. In his Will filed in 1822 Robert Potts divided the 636 acre
tract among his surviving sons, John, James, Robert, Jr., Jonathan, and
Edwin, along with the "200 more or less acres making up the homeplace which
I now live on," to his widow, Elizabeth.
Robert Potts, Sr., deeded two tracts of land from the original grant to
Robert Potts, Jr. One tract for 96 acres obtained July 24, 1811, and one for
121 acres in 1815. On Aught 22, 1811, Robert Potts, Jr., married Nancy
Eveline Alexander Gillespie and built for her the home known today as the
Robert Potts, Jr. home. Early letters among his personal papers list him
residing at "Hickory Grove" - whether this was the name of the home or the
area in which he lived has not been determined. The first entry in his Bible
states "Commenced housekeeping, January 1812." The materials for the house
were all obtained on the plantation - logs, clapboards, and stone for the
foundations and chimneys. The "log pit" used to shape the huge hand-hewn
logs and the quarry site are viewable on the property today. The furniture,
most of it fashioned from walnut, maple, pine, and apple wood, was cut on
the plantation and made for Robert Potts, Jr. A great number of the original
have been restored and remain in the home. Robert Potts, Jr., was a thrifty
man and through the years became very successful as a planter. He succeeded
in acquiring much of the original land grant for himself by purchasing three
of his brothers' holdings and inherited the remaining tract from his mother
in 1833. Robert, Jr., and Nancy had 10 children. He served as a founder and
Ruling Elder of Bethel Church, which he helped to grow, giving of his time
and money. He continued to contribute generously throughout his life.
Perhaps his most notable contribution to the area was his interest in
education - prompting him to give time and money in helping to establish
Davidson College along with his "Good Friend", William L. Davidson, whose
plantation adjoined his. He was appointed a member of the First Board of
Trustees of Davidson College and one of his sons, Charles Stanhope Potts,
entered the first class session. Other sons, Zebulon and Thomas Espy, were
also educated at Davidson. Records show that a daughter, Nancy Eveline, was
college educated, but the exact institution attended was not named.
Robert Potts, Jr., willed the homeplace tract to his youngest son, Thomas
Espy Potts and appointed his "good friend", David A. Caldwell to a
guardianship of his son. Money was stipulated for his education at Davidson
College in the will. Thomas Espy Potts was forced to buy a great deal of the
plantation and home accouterments in 1860 at a public sale when Robert
Potts, Jr.'s second wife disagreed with the will and settlement of the
estate. Thomas Espy Potts married Rebecca Catherine White of the Centre
Church community on August 3, 1852, and they had seven children. He served
during the Civil War in the cavalry under Gen. J. E. B. Stuart and letters
recording his experiences are included among the generations of Potts
papers. Thomas Espy and Becky Potts entertained many of the Methodist
Circuit Riders who held meetings at early Zion Church - as their home was
"quite close by and hospitable" as one minister wrote them.
Through will and division deeds Thomas Espy Potts passed the Potts House
and land to his youngest son, William Robert Potts. Tracts of land were also
deeded to another son, Thomas Pritchard Potts and daughter, Llllie Rebecca
Potts Smith. William Robert Potts married Katherine Wilson of Caldwell
Station - a granddaughter of Andrew Springs. They had no children, but left
a large sum of money to both Barium Springs Orphanage and Childrens Home of
Winston-Salem.
By will, William Robert Potts left the Potts House and land in 1946 to
his nephew, Clifton Eugene Smith, the son of his sister, Lillie Potts Smith.
Enough information can never be written of the "love relationship" that
emerged between the Potts House and Cliff Smith. He and his wife, Mary Reid,
a former teacher, lived on the Lillie Potts Smith tract of land and with his
inheritance from "Uncle W. R.," blended together again the large tract of
Potts Plantation. In 1946 Clifton and Mary Smith restored the Potts House to
be lived in once again by another generation of Potts descendants. Lumber
was again cut from Potts land for new clapboards and two newly-constructed
east and west wings. The restoration was done in very painstaking steps -
Cliff Smith was a perfectionist - seeing that every nail, latch, door, and
window was left as it was in the original 1811 construction. He supervised
long hours of research - this was in 1946, when this kind of activity was
not the popular "in thing" to do. When all was completed the blend of old
family home and history with livable 20th century accommodations was
finalized. Clifton and Mary Smith were parents of two daughters, Miriam
Smith and Lilyan Reid Smith. As parents they continued the traditional Potts
Presbyterian heritage by sending their daughters to Queens College.
On August 15, 1969, Clifton Eugene Smith passed the Potts House (1811)
and the original plantation land to the seventh generation of appreciative
Potts descendants, Miriam Smith Whisnant and Lilyan Reid Smith Hunter. It is
our belief that nowhere in Mecklenburg County does there remain such a
lovely tribute to perseverance, loyalty, and love of country as displayed by
the generations of the Potts Family of North Mecklenburg. Robert Potts,
Jr.'s House, furnishings, papers, and original plantation all still intact
-- always family owned and occupied - never abandoned or "Gone with the
Wind."
Architectural Description
This house is a
log structure, modified from time to time by Potts descendants, while
retaining most of its original characteristics. The massive hewn log outer
walls stand today as they were first built. The exterior surfaces were
likely exposed when first erected. However at a later unknown date they were
covered with clap board siding, and in recent years modern siding has been
applied. The fine interior wood trim and wall finish are essentially
original.
Simple dwellings of logs, notched together at the corners were introduced
to America around 1638 by Swedish settlers in Delaware Subsequently, German
and Scotch-Irish immigrants adopted this form of construction. During the
southerly expansion of the 1700's, the log cabin was widely used in this
timber-rich frontier, since it could be built with only the aid of an axe
and requires few costly nails. First log cabins were seldom intended as
permanent homes. When families wanted better houses with more amenities,
they either abandoned their cabins, incorporated them into larger cabins, or
used them as slave quarters.
On the Potts Plantation the second dwelling was again of log
construction, much larger and finished with more sophistication than the
first. It is likely that the original cabin was used for slave quarters
after the second dwelling was completed. Surprisingly, the foundation
remains of the first cabin are intact near an original, undisturbed,
plantation slave cemetery.
The second house is a simple rectangular two story structure, resting on
a low field stone foundation, with two rooms on each floor. Exterior single
shouldered brick chimneys rise at each gabled end, providing fireplaces in
all rooms, a plan which reflects the influence of eighteenth century
Virginia tidewater. One story wings now flank the original structure, having
been added by a growing family for more living space. These wings are of
recent vintage, however, and have no historic significance.
The front entrance is sheltered by an original shed-roofed porch
extending across the full width of the house and supported by unusual square
brick columns, covered initially, with smooth stucco. This porch is enclosed
with a rounded wooden rail and delicate square balusters, said to have been
carefully copied from the original work. The front first floor facade has a
center door flanked by
double hung, six over six light windows on each side.
The front door leads into a low-ceilinged parlor featuring a large
fireplace with a carefully crafted federal mantel, bordered by high narrow
plain wooden pilasters, molded cornices and an integral molded narrow mantel
shelf. The original brick fireplace surround and hearth are intact, though
presently faced with marble. Walls are covered with smooth, hand planed
boards, applied horizontally to furring strips on the exterior log walls,
and standing vertically in the single interior partition. A molded chair
rail is applied to all walls, below which painted panel edges create a
highly decorative motif. A moderate crown mold joins the walls to the wide
board ceiling. The interior partition consists of tongue and groove vertical
boards, and separates the parlor from a smaller dining room to one side.
This smaller room is finished witch matching wood trim, and includes a
fireplace and mantel similar to those in the parlor. Floors throughout the
house are original wide pine planks in the parlor, however, oak strip
flooring was recently added. At the rear, a lean-to addition is connected to
both rooms by original six panel doors. The rear dining room door provided
access to the original kitchen located about twenty-five feet to the rear of
the main house. Further study could well show that there was an original
wing at the rear, balancing the front lean-to porch.
An open
stair rises steeply in two runs to the second floor at rear of the
parlor. A molded rail and small square pickets show skilled craftsmanship. A
rare feature of the balustrade are unusual three
baluster groups on the treads. The hand rail is reflected on the stair
wall with a painted shape below which are painted panel edges. The stair
rail terminates at large square
newel posts with a molded caps at the first and second floors.
Original doors throughout the house are typically six paneled with
mortised and tenoned stile and rail joints secured with wooden pegs and
feature recessed flat panels on one side and fine bead and quirk molding on
the other. They are curiously low, clearing at the head just over six feet.
All original door hardware is intact. Iron rim box locks with brass knobs,
occur on each door. Exterior door hinges are wrought iron straps with drive
pintles. Interior doors and several small closets have hinges, with simple
iron lift latches on the cabinet doors.
At the head of the stair a wide open landing is partially enclosed with
some exposed original log construction. The logs are hewn to equal thickness
and vary in height. Wide spaced cracks are luted with clay and stone and
pointed with lime and sand mortar.
The two second floor bed chambers are connected by a low, paneled door in
a single board partition. The second room is reached by passing through the
larger which opens from the stair hall. Both rooms have smooth, hand
finished, simply trimmed wooden walls and ceilings. In the large chamber two
windows face the front, one of which is centered over the entrance door
below. The other is balanced at the side by a single window facing the front
in the smaller chamber, thus creating a balanced three window front facade
on the second floor. Each room has a single side window placed to the front
of the chimneys.
From the open stair hall there is a garret trap door in the ceiling
reached by a steep ladder. In the garret the original joists span the entire
front to rear dimension of the structure and are centered about three feet
apart. On similar spacing hewn rafters, lapped and pegged at the ridge,
support the
roof. The original roof has been removed, though evidence of the
original shingle strips can be noted in nail holes and staining on the
rafters. The rafter ends have at some past time been raised and now rest on
a continuous flat wooden plate sill, not original, laid across the top of
the joists. The rafter ends are uniquely shaped and indicate the
characteristic curved taper used in the early form of eave construction
which projected past supporting walls below to create a simple water shed,
prior to the adoption of the classic form of molded cornice. In these curved
tapers the original wooden pegs used to secure the rafters to the top wall
logs still project down from the raised ends.
Stored carefully in the garret are all of the original
window sash which were replaced with manufactured sash in recent years.
These original windows show the typical delicately formed muntin bars of the
early nineteenth century and contain a large number of blown glass lights.
In the garret are also stored many of the original simple battened window
blinds which were also replaced in recent years with paneled blinds. These
original blinds still have their wrought iron strap hinges. In the gable
ends of the garret are small square four light windows on each side of the
chimneys. Gable framing consists some original hand hewn studs, now
supplemented with intermediate sawn studs. Originally this wall was faced
pit sawn wide square edge boards.
A most remarkable characteristic of this plantation is the number of
preserved structures from the original farm dependencies. To the rear of the
house an original small log shed, of undetermined original use, remains in
good condition. This small earth-floored building retains all of the
original log walls, some of the original roof structure and the original
battened door with strap hinges and drive pintles. Nearby, there is a
rebuilt summer kitchen, located on the site of the original kitchen. The
original location of the well shed, blacksmith shop and several other out
buildings are known, and offer exciting possibilities for archeological
investigation. But, by far the most promising of structures built by Robert
Potts is a well-preserved barn located on a slight rise across the road,
about a hundred yards from the main house. This building is constructed of
massive hewn logs laid with tight fitting notched and chamfered corners,
heavy pegged door and window frame openings and long hewn rafters and
joists, pegged at the ridge and walls. Wide, pit sawn, board stall
partitions divide the interior. These boards were sawn on the plantation
and, surprisingly, the original pit is still on the place. The barn has been
in constant use since the original construction in 1811, in itself an
astonishing fact. The original structure measures some forty by sixty feet
and includes a number of animal stalls, a large equipment and tack room,
grain storage rooms, and a hay loft. In two of the animal stalls are huge,
hollowed log feed troughs, likely original, measuring some twenty feet in
length, and hewn from trees measuring over three feet in diameter. In the
feed storage room, a grain bin, hollowed from a cypress log measuring five
feet across, is an astonishing artifact. This bin was cut and installed in
the barn before the structure was completed, since the size would preclude
moving it into place later. Original wrought iron hardware is found here and
there, throughout the building. In the barn yard is a large granite watering
trough similar to those found in other early nineteenth century, North
Mecklenburg plantations.
Scattered about on the four hundred acre plantation are probably a dozen
or more old tenant houses. Some of these date to the earliest years and one
could expect to find many important historic remains during a study of these
sites.
The Potts place is a rare instance of descendants retaining original
eighteenth century land grant acreage, and and preserving early buildings
with faithful diligence. The preservation and restoration of this unique
architectural heritage should be enthusiastically encourages and assisted at
every opportunity.
Bibliography
An Inventory of Old Buildings in Mecklenburg County and Charlotte for the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission.
Architectural Descrpition prepared by Jack O. Boyte, AIA.
Historical Overview and Chain of Title prepared by Dr. Chalmers G.
Davidson.
Records of the Mecklenburg County Tax Office.
Date of Preparation of this Report : Mar. 2, 1976
Prepared by: Dr. Dan L. Morrill, Director
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission
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