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RANDOLPH SCOTT
HOUSE
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Observer Article on the Randolph Scott House
This report was written on March 7, 1988
1. Name and location of the property: The property known as the
Randolph Scott House is located at 1301 Dilworth Road in Charlotte, North
Carolina.
2. Name, address, and telephone number of the present owner of the
property: The owner of the property is:
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Haynes
1301 Dilworth Road
Charlotte, NC, 28203
Telephone: (704) 375-3313
3. Representative photographs of the property: This report
contains representative photographs of the property.
4. A map depicting the location of the property: This report
contains a map which depicts the location of the property.
5. Current Deed Book Reference to the property: The most recent
reference to this property is recorded in Mecklenburg Deed Book 5203, page
437. The Tax Parcel Number of the property is: 123-102-01.
6. A brief historical sketch of the property: This report contains
a brief historical sketch of the property prepared by Dr. William H.
Huffman, Ph.D.
7. A brief architectural description of the property: This report
contains a brief architectural description of the property prepared by Dr.
Dan L. Morrill, Ph.D.
8. Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets the
criteria for designation set forth in NCG.S. 160A-399.4:
a. Special significance in terms of its history, architecture,
and/or cultural importance: The Commission judges that the property
known as the Randolph Scott House does possess special significance in
terms of Charlotte-Mecklenburg. The Commission bases its judgment on the
following considerations: 1) the Randolph Scott House, erected in
1926-1927, was briefly the home of Randolph Scott (1903-1987), noted
cinema actor; 2) George Grant Scott (1867-1936), the initial owner, was an
influential resident of Charlotte, including representing Fourth Ward on
the Board of Aldermen; 3) the Randolph Scott House was designed by Louis
H. Asbury (1877-1975), an architect of local and regional significance;
and 4) the Randolph Scott House occupies a strategic location in terms of
the townscape of Dilworth, Charlotte's initial streetcar suburb.
b. Integrity of design, setting, workmanship, materials, feeling,
and/or association: The Commission contends that the architectural
description by Dr. Dan L. Morrill, Ph.D. which is included in this report
demonstrates that the Randolph Scott 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 which becomes
"historic property." The current appraised value of the improvement is
$163,540. The current appraised value of the .537 acres of land is $60,000.
The total appraised value of the property is $223,540. The property is zoned
R9.
Date of Preparation of this Report: March 7, 1988
Prepared by: Dr. Dan L. Morrill
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission
1225 S. Caldwell St.
Charlotte, NC 28203
Telephone: (704) 376-9115
Historical Overview
Dr. William H. Huffman
The Scott House was built in 1926-27 by George Grant and Lucy Crane
Scott, and was designed by the noted Charlotte architect Louis Asbury. The
Scotts were the parents of film star Randolph Scott, who lived in the house
as a young man and returned for frequent visits after achieving stardom.
Local lore has it that Randolph built the house for his mother and sister,
but in fact it was built by his parents before he started his film career.
George G. Scott (1867-1936) was born in Norfolk, VA of Quaker parents,
and was educated at Guilford College and West Town Friends school in Western
Pennsylvania. In 1891, he and Lucy Lavinia Crane, of Charleston, WV, were
married. In the 1890s, Scott set up a public accountant firm in Charlotte,
and in 1907 was elected to a term on the Board of Aldermen from
Fourth Ward. As Chairman of the Finance Committee, he oversaw the city's
first published financial statement, and modernized the accounting systems
of the administration and waterworks departments. His statewide reputation
resulted in his drafting of North Carolina's first certified public
accountant law, and he was appointed by the governor to the state board of
accountancy, which he chaired for a number of years. Recognized as an expert
in accounting procedures and income tax law, Scott was a frequent
contributor to accounting journals. By the 1920s, his firm, Scott, Charnley
& Co., had offices in Brevard Court in Charlotte, as well as branch offices
in Greensboro, Raleigh and Columbia. 1
Lucy Crane Scott (1866-1958) was born in Luray, VA, in the Shenandoah
Valley, the daughter of Col. Joseph Minor Crane and the former Barbara
Lavinia Lineberger, and attended Hollins College in Roanoke, VA. Mrs. Scott
was very interested in her heritage, and belonged to the D. A. R., the Magna
Carta Society, the Plantagenet Society (the membership to which she willed
to her daughter Barbara) and the Knights of the Order of the Garter. The
Scotts had seven children: Luciele (Mrs. T. T. Perry), Margaret (Peggy),
Catherine Strother, Sarah Virginia, Barbara, George Randolph, and Joseph
Crane. At the time of her death at the age of 92, Mrs. Scott had fourteen
grandchildren and sixteen great-grandchildren. 2
For many years, the Scotts lived on 10th Street in Fourth Ward, in a
large Victorian House that is no longer extant. In 1923, however, they took
an interest in moving to Charlotte's first
streetcar suburb,
Dilworth, by investing five thousand dollars in a lot on Dilworth Road,
which they bought from the Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company
(commonly Known as the 4 C's).3 The 4 C's was a development
company founded by Edward Dilworth Latta (1851-1925) and five associates in
l890. In 1893, Latta, a Princeton-educated South Carolina native, had built
a trouser manufacturing plant in Charlotte that prospered. He and other
entrepreneurs of the city were convinced of the great potential for growth
in the wake of New South industrialization, based on cotton mill production
and distribution that took off in Charlotte in the 1880s, and sought to
capitalize on that growth. 4
Thus the 4 C's bought a 422-acre farmland site on the southwest edge of
town and began to promote the sale of lots in 1891. To entice potential
buyers out to the suburb, they built a new electric trolley line that ran
from the Square into and around the new development, which included its
attractive park Latta Park was at the heart of the development, and it
boasted a pond for boating, an outdoor pavilion that hosted traveling shows,
and strolling pathways. The development was designed to have a true mix of
housing, with the fine houses located on the main boulevards and more modest
dwellings on the side streets. 5
In October, 1925, when the Scotts were ready to move ahead with building
their Dilworth Road house, they selected the versatile local architect Louis
Asbury to do the design. Asbury (1877-1975) was the city's first
professionally-trained architect. A Charlotte native who used to help his
father build houses in the city as a youth in the 1890s, he attended Trinity
College (now Duke University), and completed his architecture studies at
MIT. After gaining practical experience with some architectural firms in New
York, Asbury returned in Charlotte in 1908 to begin a nearly fifty-year
career in the city. Of the more that one thousand designs that came from his
studio, many are landmarks in Charlotte and surrounding towns. In Charlotte,
they include the old County Courthouse, the C. P. Moody and Jamison houses
on Providence Road, the McAden House on Granville, the Myers Park Methodist
Church, the Law Building, the
Hawthorne Lane Methodist Church, the
Garibaldi-Bruns facade at the Square, and numerous other institutional,
church and private home designs. 6
By January, 1926, the design was complete, and local builder Thies-Smith
Realty Co. took out a building permit, and estimated the cost of
construction to be $25,000.7 The next year, the house, with its
distinctive dual stairway with spiral rails that ascends from the front
entry, was finished, and the Scotts moved into their fine new ten-room home.
By this time, only Catherine and Randolph lived at home. Randolph
(1903-1987) had attended private college-prep schools, and went to Georgia
Tech, where he played football and dreamed of becoming an all-American.
After a back injury ended his football career, he transferred to UNC-Chapel
Hill for his last two years, then returned to Charlotte to work in his
father's firm. But business did not interest the restless young man, so, in
1928, he set off for Hollywood with best friend Jack Heath and a letter of
introduction to Howard Hughes from his father. After getting a bit part from
Hughes and coming to the attention of Cecile B. DeMille, (who sent him to
the Pasadena Playhouse for two years to get acting experience), Randolph
Scott launched a long acting career that included some one hundred films.
Tall, slim, and handsome, he embodied the American ideal of the hero in the
same way as Charles Lindbergh, and enshrined that image in many classic
westerns. His visits to Charlotte to see his family and friends were often
an occasion for stories in the local press. 8
George G. Scott died unexpectedly in Raleigh in 1936, and Lucy Crane
Scott lived in the house until her own death in 1958. Two years later, it
was sold to Frank O. Alford, whose heirs sold the house to the present
owners, James and Ellen Haynes, in 1986.9 The Haynes have
restored the house and grounds in a sensitive way that allows the
architecture and the setting to stand out once again.
NOTES
1 Charlotte Observer ,March 5, 1935, p. 1; 'Charlotte
Builders,' undated Charlotte Observer article on file in Public
Library.
2 Charlotte Observer, June 25, 1958, p. 1B.
3Deed Book 526, p. 88.
4 Dan L. Morrill, "Edward Dilworth Latta and the Charlotte
Consolidated Construction Company (1890-1925); Builders of a New South
City," The North Carolina Historical Review, 62 (July, 1985),
293-316; Thomas W. Hanchett, "Charlotte Neighborhood Survey," Charlotte,
Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission, 1984.
5 Ibid.
6 Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. Louis Asbury Papers. Architectural Job List, 1629, 13
October 1925; information on file at the Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission.
7 City of Charlotte Building Permit dated 5 January 1926.
8 Interview with Virginia Heath, Matthews, NC 22 June 1987.
9 Deed Book 2132, p. 129; Deed Book 5203, p. 437.
Architectural Description
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Louis Asbury |
Dr. Dan L. Morrill
The Scott House, a two and one-half story, three bay wide by two bay
deep,
running bond brick dwelling with a tiled tripped roof, plain external
end chimneys, a one story enclosed sunroom on either end of the main block,
a centered tripped dormer, and broad eaves with decorated exposed rafter
ends, was erected in 1926-27 for George Grant Scott and Lucy Crane Scott,
the parents of film star Randolph Scott.1 It was designed by
Louis H. Asbury (1877-1975), an architect of local and regional importance.2
The Scott House has experienced alterations over the years, most notably
with the enclosure of a porch (now sunroom) on the left end of the main
block, the modernization of the kitchen, and the placement of a table in
what is now a breakfast room. The overall integrity of Asbury's design
survives, however.
The Scott House belongs to a broad and diverse category of so-called
"period houses" which were erected in the affluent suburbs of early
twentieth-century North Carolina.3 Situated on a tree-shaded lot
at the corner of Dilworth Road and Arosa Avenue in the curvilinear section
of Dilworth, Charlotte's first streetcar suburb, the house is inspired
primarily by the decorative vocabulary of Colonial Revivalism.4
Colonial Revivalism, which emphasizes classical ornamentation, geometric
massing and, at least in North Carolina, simplicity of detail in comparison
with the more adventuresome specimens of this motif found in the major
cities of the North and Midwest, was probably the most popular example of
historic eclecticism which emerged in the late 1800s and early 1900s in the
United States, including the South. This widespread acclaim was in no small
part due to the fact that Colonial Revivalism provided compelling images
which enabled wealthy suburbanites to satisfy their "search for order" and
their desire to live in an "idyllic escape from the overcrowding, crime, and
ethnic strife identified with the city."5
Its Colonial Revival details notwithstanding, such as its columned
entrance portico, entrance door with
sidelights and
fanlight with tracery, semi-circular
voussoirs with
keystones above fanlights atop the double doors on the side bays of the
front facade, and smaller fanlights on the enclosed sunrooms, the Scott
House, like many of Louis Asbury's early houses, also exhibits qualities of
the Rectilinear style, especially in the box-like severity of its overall
form and massing.6 Particularly noteworthy in this regard are the
second floor windows, which are quite simple, almost bungaloid, in
appearance.
Again, in keeping with many of Asbury's other house designs, the Scott
House is more purely Colonial Revival on the inside, even emulating the
restrained elegance associated with the Federal style. A spacious entrance
hallway leads to a pair of graceful, dramatic stairways which rise to a
landing and then delicately join to continue to the second floor. Large,
fluted
Ionic columns and pilasters with egg and dart moulding, and an exquisite
but essentially unencumbered cornice adorn the wide passageways that open
from the entrance hallway to the living room, on the left, and the dining
room, on the right, each of which contains a fireplace with a Colonial
Revival mantelpiece.
An especially striking feature of the Scott House, and one which
demonstrates Louis Asbury's skill and flare as an architect, is the
interface between the stairwell and the second floor hallway. Situated to
allow the morning sunlight to pour through double doors with a fanlight
above, the space creates a feeling of being suspended in air. A balustrade
with thin pickets borders the landing and then sweeps with compelling and
dramatic impact to the stairway and then suddenly downward.
The garage, an original outbuilding, is located on the southeastern
corner of the property. Mimicking the main house, it is a running bond brick
structure with a tiled tripped roof, side windows, and three large entrance
doors. The landscaping of the house is quite elegant. A low, rock rubble
wall extends across the front, and a metal and brick wall extends along the
northern or Arosa Avenue side of the property and encloses a portion of the
backyard. A serpentine walkway extends from the Dilworth Road sidewalk to
the front portico. The property contains several large trees. Finally, the
Scott House occupies a strategic location in terms of the overall Dilworth
townscape, because it is the first residence on the southern side of
Dilworth Road as one travels south from Morehead Street; and it is also
situated immediately across Arosa Avenue from the parking lot for Covenant
Presbyterian Church.
NOTES
1 Dr. William H. Huffman, "Historical Sketch of the Scott
House" for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission (June,
1987).
2 For additional information on Louis H. Asbury, see "Survey
and Research Report on the Old Advent Christian Church" for the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission (November 2, 1987);
Thomas W. Hanchett, "Charlotte And Its Neighborhoods: The Growth of a New
South City, 1850-1930" for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties
Commission (1986), hereinafter cited as Hanchett.
3 For a detailed analysis of the architecture of North
Carolina's early twentieth century suburbs, see Catherine W. Bishir and
Lawrence S. Early, Early Twentieth-Century Suburbs in North Carolina:
Essays on History, Architecture and Planning (Raleigh: Archeology and
Historic Preservation Section, Division of Archives and History, North
Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, 1985), hereinafter cited as
Suburbs. For an explanation of the term "period house", see John Poppeliers,
S. Allen Chambers, and Nancy B. Schwartz, "What Style Is It? Part Four."
Historic Preservation (January-March, 1977), pp. 14-23.
4 The Colonial Revival style arose in the 1880s and is
attributed to the architectural firm McKim, Mead and White (Charles Follen
McKim, W. R. Mead, Stanford White). For additional information, see Marcus
Whiffen, American Architecture Since 1780: A Guide to the Styles
(Cambridge: M.l.T. Press, 1969), pp.159-165. In Charlotte, the Colonial
Revival style, called initially the "true classical style", was introduced
in 1894, by Charles Christian Hook (1869-1938), the first architect who
resided in Charlotte throughout his career ( Charlotte Observer,
September 19, 1894). For a history of the evolution of Dilworth, see Dan L.
Morrill, "Edward Dilworth Latta and the Charlotte Consolidated Construction
Company (1890-1925): Builders of a New South City" The North Carolina
Historical Review (July, 1985), pp. 293-3167. For a comprehensive
analysis of the built environment of Dilworth, see Thomas W. Hanchett,
"Charlotte And Its Neighborhoods" for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic
Properties Commission (March 1985) Chapter 5.
5 Bishir, "Introduction", Suburbs. David R. Goldfield," North
Carolina's Early Twentieth-Century Suburbs and the Urbanizing South",
Suburbs, p. 9. Margaret Supplee Smith, "The American Idyll in North
Carolina's First Suburbs: Landscape and Architecture", Suburbs, p. 23.
6 Hanchett. The term "Rectilinear" was coined by Wilbert R.
Hasbrouk and Paul E. Sprague in A Survey of Historic Architecture: the
Village of Oak Park, Illinois (Oak Park, Illinois: Landmarks Commission,
Village of Oak Park, 1976), pp. 8-14, 16-19. Most approximating the Scott
House among Louis Asbury's houses in Charlotte are the
J. M. Jamison House (1912), the Charles Philo Moody House (1913), and
the
Henry M. McAden House (1917-1918).
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