ST. MARK'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
This report was written on March 1, 1983
1. Name and location of the property: The property known as
the St. Mark's Episcopal Church is located on the Mount
Holly-Huntersville Road, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
2. Name, address, and telephone number of the present owner and
occupant of the property:
The present owner and occupant of the property is:
St. Mark's Episcopal Church
R.F.D. 9 Mt. Holly-Huntersville Road
Charlotte, N.C. 28208
Telephone: (704) 399-5193
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 deed to this property is listed in Mecklenburg County Deed Book
1870 at page 119. The Tax Parcel Number of the property is: 025-161-03.
6. A brief historical sketch of the property: This report
contains a brief historic sketch of the property prepared by Dr. William
H. Huffman.
7. A brief architectural description of the property: This
report contains an architectural description of the property prepared by
Thomas W. Hanchett.
8. Documentation of why and in what ways the property meets the
criteria set forth in N.C.G.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 St. Mark's Episcopal Church does possess special
significance in terms of Charlotte-Mecklenburg. The Commission bases
its judgment on the following considerations: 1) St. Mark's Episcopal
Church is the second oldest church of that denomination in
Charlotte-Mecklenburg and was an outgrowth of St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, the oldest Episcopal congregation in Charlotte-Mecklenburg; 2)
the building, erected in 1886-7 by local craftsmen, is an excellent
local example of the "English country Gothic" style; 3) in recent
years, the members of the church have performed a sensitive
restoration of the sanctuary; 4) St. Mark's Episcopal Church retains
its essential rural setting, including a burial ground.
b. Integrity of design, setting, workmanship, materials, feeling
and/or association: The Commission contends that the attached
architectural description by Mr. Thomas W. Hanchett demonstrates that
St. Mark's Episcopal Church 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 8.68
acres of land is $30,000. The current appraised value of the building is
$126,390. The total current appraised value is $156,390. The property is
zoned R15.
Date of Preparation of this Report: March 1, 1983
Prepared by: Dr. Dan L. Morrill, Director
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission
218 N. Tryon Street
Charlotte, North Carolina 28202
Telephone: (704) 376-9115
Historical Overview
Dr. William H. Huffman
The Long Creek community, just to the north of Charlotte, is rich in
rural history, much of which has remained unstudied and neglected until
recently, with the exception of the Hopewell Presbyterian Church.
Sitting prominently on the hill overlooking its approaches from the
Mount Holly-Huntersville Road, St. Mark's Episcopal Church, in the form
of both its buildings and its members, has been an important part of the
life of the community. The church began as a result of the interest of a
Long Creek farmer, Columbus W. McCoy (1834-?), who had become discontent
with the Presbyterian teaching of the Hopewell Church, of which he was a
member. A younger acquaintance of his, Reverend Edwin A. Osborne, had
captured McCoy's interest by leaving Hopewell and studying for the
Episcopalian ministry and subsequently loaning him a Prayer Book and
some other material to study. McCoy had also attended some services at
St. Peter's Episcopal Church, and, through a friend, Colonel Hamilton C.
Jones, a Charlotte attorney and noted orator, was introduced to the
rector of St. Peter's, Reverend Joseph Blount Cheshire, Jr. (d.1932) in
early 1883. After bringing some friends from the country to some
services in Charlotte during the year, McCoy extended an invitation for
Reverend Cheshire, who eventually became bishop of the North Carolina
diocese, to come preach to a gathering in Long Creek.1
Thus on November 18, 1883, after holding his regular Sunday services
at 11:00, the Charlotte rector was driven to the country in McCoy's
wagon. At 4:30, he preached to a good-sized gathering at the Beech Cliff
School House, which was located on the land of Columbus McCoy's brother,
Albert McCoy (1843-1925). Impressed by the size and attentiveness of
those assembled, Reverend Cheshire preached again the following evening
and stayed at Columbus McCoy's home for a few days to become acquainted
with some of his neighbors. Four weeks later, on December 16th, the
Rector of St. Peter's returned to preach again for two days, but weather
and bad roads prevented his further journeys to the country until a
Sunday in spring, May 11, 1884. On his next visit of June 29, he
proposed to some of the interested participants, including the brothers
McCoy, Robert Kerns, James Kirksey, Robert D. Whitley, John Blythe,
Captain Thomas Gluyas and others, that they consider joining the church
and organizing a Protestant Episcopal congregation. At services on the
following July 26, Reverend Cheshire announced to the group that he
intended to have a series of services lasting several days in the middle
of the following month.2
Assisted by Reverend George Wetmore and Reverend Edwin Osborne (who
had first interested Columbus McCoy in the church), the Reverend Joseph
Blount Cheshire went to Long Creek on Tuesday, August 11, with the
intention of holding services through Friday. There they were met an
hour before the services by a number of people who strongly urged them
to stay through Sunday, which Cheshire and Osborne agreed to do while
Wetmore returned to look after St. Peter's in Charlotte. For every
service they were greeted by large congregations, at times too numerous
for the one-room schoolhouse which housed them, and the gathering seemed
particularly moved by the earnest and straightforward preaching style of
Reverend Osborne. At the high point of this eventful series on Sunday, a
meeting was held of those interested in forming a congregation, and the
following petition to the Bishop of the Diocese of North Carolina was
drawn up:
We, whose names are here underwritten, desire to be organized into
a congregation of St. Mark's Chapel; and we do hereby agree to be
governed by the Constitution and Canons of the Protestant Episcopal
Church in the United States of America, and of the Diocese of North
Carolina. Done at Beech Cliff School House, Long Creek Township,
Mecklenburg County, N.C., August 17th, 1884, being the Tenth Sunday
after Trinity. (Signed)
C. W. McCoy
Thos. Gluyas
A. McCoy
W. D. Jamison
W. D. Price
N. J. Price
L. F. Jamison
R. V. Kerns
R. D. Whitley
Maria Davis
Jennie D. Alexander
In addition to the above, John N. Blythe, Robert W. Blythe, Mrs. Mary
C. McCoy, James S. Kirksey and Benjamin W. Houston also wanted to be
among the original members as soon as they could get a certificate of
dismission from the Hopewell Presbyterian Church.3 The
following October 24th, the Bishop came from Raleigh, preached the
sermon, confirmed sixteen communicants into the church (making nineteen
in all), and received another petition from the congregation. The next
day, Bishop Lyman issued their founding document:
Application having been made to me by several members of the
Church, residing in Long Creek Township, in the County of Mecklenburg,
and state and Diocese of North Carolina, requesting the organization
of a Mission in said township, agreeably with the provisions of
Section 2, Canon XII of said Diocese: Now therefore be it known to the
Faithful in Christ Jesus that I have organized and by these present,
do organize, a Mission as desired, the same to be known as St. Mark's
Mission, and I do further appoint the following persons as officers of
the same, to wit: John N. Blythe-Warden, and Thomas Gluyas-Treasurer.
Given my hand in the city of Charlotte, this twenty-fifth day of
October in the year of our Lord 1884.
(Signed) Theodore B. Lyman
Bishop of North Carolina
Attest: Jos. Blount Cheshire, Jr.
Minister in charge said Mission
In addition, Columbus W. McCoy was also commissioned to be the lay
leader of the congregation. The name St. Mark's was suggested by
Reverend Cheshire and Reverend Osborne, because of the Biblical
association of St. Mark and St. Peter as companions, which could
represent a like association between the two Mecklenburg churches. Also
at the October 24th meeting, it was requested informally that the Bishop
consider appointing Reverend Edwin A. Osborne to be in charge of the
mission, and $300.00 was promised toward his support for the first year.
Everyone involved subsequently agreed to this arrangement, and the
Reverend Osborne took over from Reverend Cheshire on January 1, 1885.
Edwin Augustus Osborne (1837-1926) led a full and eventful life. His
youth was spent with his pioneer father, Dr. Ephriam Brevard Osborne
(who fought with Andrew Jackson in New Orleans) in Alabama, Arkansas and
Texas, but at the age of 22, he returned to North Carolina, the home of
his ancestors. Two years later, he entered the Civil War as the Captain
of an Iredell County Company, and eventually rose to the rank of Colonel
through much gallantry in action and despite being wounded a number of
times. At war's end, in 1865, he married Fannie Swan Moore (who was
descended from Colonial South Carolina's Governor James Moore and
General Maurice Moore, a Revolutionary War hero), and became a lawyer.
He subsequently secured the post of Clerk of the Superior Court of
Mecklenburg County, which he held for about ten years before resigning
to enter the ministry. After ordination as a deacon in 1877, he began
his ministry at a small salary in Fletcher, North Carolina. Reverend
Osborne served at St. Mark's from 1885-91, 1892-95, 1896-98, 1900-04,
1906-09, and 1910 and established the Thompson Orphanage and Training
Institution, of which he was Superintendent for ten years, in 1887.5
After six months labor with his new charge, in July, 1885, Reverend
Osborne provided some insights to the struggles of the new church:
"I found the little flock anxiously awaiting me, and full of zeal
and hope. My heart almost failed me as I thought of the trials and
tribulations and hardships that await them, and also of the probable
disappointments, for they expected a rapid growth in members, and
depended largely upon my personal influence in the community to give
strength and popularity to the cause. But I know how difficult it
would be to overcome the prejudice and opposition of the community
against the church, and that in all probability our growth would be
slow for at least a number of years... And now after six months, I
write the fulfillments of these forebodings though I am thankful to
say that the Lord has given some indication of his favor to the work,
by adding six other adult persons and several inputs to our ranks. But
the opposition to the work is very strong and very bitter. Every
influence that can be brought to bear against us is used, and I hear
much misrepresentations being used. Still our members have so far,
with only one exception, been faithful, and patient, and true, and I
thank God for many indications of a healthy and permanent growth. Our
members have been strengthened and united by the persecution which
they have sustained, and I trust that the opposition itself has been
weakened by the calm and judicious bearing of our members."6
Just under four months after the mission was started, in February,
1885, two large landowners, who are now church members, sold a total of
two and one-quarter acres of choice hilltop land for a modest sum to the
church trustees: Robert D. and Martha McCoy Whitley, and Benjamin and
Dovey Houston (see attached map).7 Robert Davidson Whitley
(1820-1900), who was Columbus McCoy brother-in-law, owned over three
hundred acres south of the church property along Beatties Ford Road,
including the Long Creek Mill, sometimes known as Whitley's Mill, on
Long Creek. The foundation of the mill, the mill race, and the ruins of
the miller's house are still extant 8
Thus early on, the members of the new church were interested in
putting up their own house of worship. The drive to raise money went on
in 1885 and 1886, but the early church minutes show that the effort
received a major setback in the middle of 1886 because of severe rains
which almost totally destroyed the crops in the area.9 By
October, however, there was great hope of beginning the work. Reverend
Cheshire had been working at St. Peter's in Charlotte to help raise
funds, and went to a General Convention in Chicago with the
understanding that the work would get under way in a week or ten days.
While there, he received a letter from R. D. Whitley explaining that
Reverend Osborne was disappointed about the level of funds received, and
wanted to postpone construction until the spring, which Whitley thought
would be disastrous for the momentum thus far achieved. Cheshire
immediately wired Whitley to proceed thus: "Go ahead, and I will be
responsible." When the Reverend Mr. Osborne read it, he wanted to know
exactly what it meant, but Whitley assured him it meant what it said,
and so the plans went forward.10
On October 21, 1886, a contract was given to J. F. Grady to construct
the church for $770.00. The contractor, Joseph Free Grady, Sr.
(1851-1929) was a local resident who moved to Charlotte in 1888 and
became a prominent builder there. Among other projects, he built some of
the first houses in Dilworth for the 4-C's (Charlotte Consolidated
Construction Company) and also built a number of fine homes in the city
and neighboring counties.11 The church contract called for
all of the material to be furnished by a committee of the church, except
the door and window frames, doors, sash, putty, glass and lights.12
All the bricks were made at the bottom of the hill from the church at
the creek branch by John Ellis McAuley (1861-1929), a "country
carpenter" who built a number of one- and two-story frame houses in the
area of similar pattern (including the old church rectory about 1897-8).13
Starting out with clay from the creek bank which was shaped in wooden
molds (one of which is still extant), the twenty-five-year-old McAuley
fired the brick in a kiln put up on the hillside above the creek. In
addition to severe rains, 1886 also brought an earthquake which
destroyed McAuley's kiln and a number of his bricks, wiping out any
profit he hoped to make. But with Reverend Cheshire's backing, he
reconstructed a crude (and dangerous) kiln of an old steam boiler
encased in brick, which he used without a steam pressure gauge, and
proceeded to finish the job of making all the handsome brick for the
church. The cornerstone, carved by W. D. Price, a parishioner, was laid
on October 28, and contains a copy of the Bible, the Prayer Book, copies
of the "Churchman," "Living Church," and "Church Messenger, "as well as
a short history of the mission to that time, including the names of the
active church members.15 On the following March 27, 1887, the
first service was held in the new brick church. On that date Reverend
Osborne wrote:
...(the church) has been erected by the earnest efforts of the
members, assisted by means furnished by friends of the cause in
Charlotte and other parts of the state, and some who lived in the
North. The latter contributions were made through Bishop Lyman.
In July, 1887, Colonel Hamilton C. Jones gave the country church an
altar, and about January, 1891, it was plastered, wainscoted, oiled, and
painted, and a rood screen (no longer extant),was built. The first class
was confirmed by Reverend (later Bishop) Cheshire at St. Mark's December
7, 1893, and in 1895 and 1896, the chancel rail was put up, and the
prayer desk, credence table (shelf) and Rector's (or Bishop's) chair
were purchased. Consecration of the church building took place on May
10, 1896, after all indebtedness was taken care of.17
Through the years since its beginning, St. Mark's has remained a
small rural parish, mostly serving descendants of the original families.
Indeed, it was removed from mission status only about 1960. It has,
however, remained a significant part of the Long Creek community. As
mentioned above, a two-story frame rectory was built about 1897 or 1898
by John Ellis McAuley on land donated by the Whitleys and Justice Heriot
Clarkson and his wife, Mary Osborne Clarkson.l8 In 1954, a
church classroom and activities building was added to the site near the
church. More recently, the church itself was, in 1980, restored to much
of its original state through efforts led by Mr. Frank Penninger, and
the interior furniture was restored by Mr. Banks Blythe. One can still
picture St. Mark's as part of a late nineteenth-century flourishing
rural community. The charming "country gothic" church sat high on the
hill overlooking the sand-clay road from Mount Holly to Huntersville,
and nearby was the rectory (which was also used as a meeting hall by the
Masons)20 and the miller's house. Southward down at Long
Creek was the mill, powered by water in the long mill race, and across
the creek was the country store. The elegance and simplicity of the
structure itself easily reminds us of a simpler life of a century ago,
and the names associated with the church constitute an important part of
the history of the Long Creek community and Mecklenburg County.
NOTES
1 "History of St. Mark's Mission, Mecklenburg County, NC,
from 1883-1885," by Jos. Blount Cheshire, Jr. Unpublished historical
sketch in church records, pp. 1-2.
2 Ibid., pp. 2-3.
3 Ibid., pp. 3-4.
4 Ibid., p. 5.
5 Ibid., p. 5; "Address of Justice Heriot Clarkson,
Unveiling at St. Mark's Church, Memorial Tablet to Rt. Rev. Joseph
Blount Cheshire, Jr., and Rev. Edwin Augustus Osborne, Sunday, November
26th, 1933." Typewritten copy of address, pp. 2-4.
6 Typewritten copy of church records, dated 16 July 1885.
7 Deed book 42, p. 271; Ibid., p. 272; 16 Feb. 1885.
8 Survey of R. D. Whitley estate land by T. B. Spratt,
dated April 1926. Interview and site visit with Mary Ellen Droppers, and
Rev. Tom Droppers, Rector of St. Mark's.
9 Typewritten copy of St. Mark's Church minutes, p. 9.
10 Jos. Blount Cheshire, St. Mark's Church: Its
Beginnings, 1884-1886 (N. P., August, 1927), pp. 23-4.
11 Charlotte Observer, October 12, 1929, p. 4.
12 See note 9.
13 Charles W. Sommerville, The History of Hopewell
Presbyterian Church, (Charlotte: Hopewell Presbyterian Church,
1939), pp. 156-9; interview with the Droppers, note 8.
14 Sommerville, p. 159.
15 Typewritten copy of church minutes, p. 9.
16 Lucy Gluyas, "The Beginning of St. Mark's Church",
unpublished sketch from church minutes, p. 3.
17 Ibid.
18 Deed Book 116, p. 134, 14 December 1896.
19 Interview with the Droppers, note 8; Mecklenburg
Gazette, October 9, 1980. p.?
20 Deed Book 127, p.41, 16 April 1898.
Architectural Description
Thomas W. Hanchett
St. Mark's Episcopal is a well preserved example of a small rural
"English country Gothic" style church. It was built of handmade red
brick by local craftsmen in 1886-1887. Today, sited atop a tree covered
hill with its parsonage and graveyard, near an old country crossroad, it
looks much as it must have at the turn of the century. The Gothic style
has long been associated with the Episcopal Church in America, because
this was the chief ecclesiastical style in England when King Henry VIII
created the denomination. Bishop Joseph Blount Cheshire, who oversaw the
creation of St. Mark's, had a strong interest in church architecture and
in his later years wrote an essay touching on the development of the
Gothic in the United States ("St.Peter's Church, Charlotte, Historical
Addresses," 1921):
"Church architecture in America ... took its rise in the study of
the Gothic architecture of our mother Church of England.... The
pointed arch, the long nave, the sharp roof with its open timber
construction ... -- these and other characteristics of the Gothic
style have come to be commonly understood as denoting a building
intended for ecclesiastical purposes; and almost all denominations
making any attempts at churchly effect in their buildings have
followed our lead...."
According to Cheshire the style had been introduced by a Bishop
Hopkins, who built the 1825 Trinity Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
the first "purely Gothic" chapel in the United States, based on an
English pattern book. In 1836 Hopkins had published his own "Essay on
Gothic Architecture ... designed chiefly for the Clergy." It contained
lithographed church plans and details by Hopkins, as well as
illustrations of notable English churches. Cheshire owned a copy of
Hopkins' book. With the long Episcopal tradition of Gothic design, and
with Gothic enthusiast Cheshire in charge of fund raising, it is not
surprising that St. Mark's is a good example of the style. It has a
cross-shaped plan with a three-bay-long nave, a pair of small single-bay
side wings, and a one-bay chancel. Roofs are characteristically steep
pitched, flaring outward at the eaves. Old photos show that the roofs
were covered with wood shingles. Today's roof is of similar appearing
grey composition shingles. Each bay has a simple eight-pane lancet
window, with no tracery, set in a Gothic
pointed arched opening. Many of the panes still have original
handblown wavy glass. Behind the altar is a large three-part window with
tracery and a compound arch. Stained glass was added in the chancel
windows in the 1960s, and some panes bear the names of their
contributors.
The church has three entrances, the main one at the end of the nave
and smaller doors in the two wings. Each is set deep into a pointed
arched opening. They are heavy double doors built up of wood and have
elaborate cast metal hinges. In the 1960s each pair of doors was nailed
together and rehinged to form a single panel. Walls of the church are of
handsome red brick handmade at the site by John Ellis McAuley. One of
the molds used to make the bricks still exists, a wooden form that held
two bricks at once. The brick bond of the walls alternates a row of
headers with five rows of stretchers. Single pilasters delineate each
bay and emphasize the corners of the structure. A water table steps out
from the main walls at the base of the building. The brick chimney
nestled next to the southwest wing was added after the structure was
built. The interior of the nave is dominated by the chamfered-beam open
truss that supports the roof. Walls are of smooth white plaster with
wooden tongue-and-groove
wainscoting. The space accommodates a dozen rows of pews on each
side of a center aisle. Where the side wings join the nave there is a
hint of the Victorian decoration popular for residences in the period.
Simple wooden columns are topped by scroll-sawn brackets and arch-shaped
trim.
The work is somewhat similar to the porch trim of the nearby
parsonage built by John Ellis McAuley in the late 1890s, and it may be
that he is responsible for this decoration in the church. Today one side
wing contains additional pews, while the other is partially closed off
to hold storage cabinets and a sink. The chancel is raised slightly
above the main floor of the church. Its elaborate wooden rood screen and
some other woodwork were removed in a 1950s "modernization." The walnut
communion and original credence tables were put back in 1980 along with
the old Bishop's chair, supplemented by a new pulpit and prayer desks by
local craftsman Banks Blythe. The work was directed by parishioner Frank
Penneger, who also stripped white paint from all the interior
wainscoting and woodwork, and painted the church's exterior trim a
subdued Victorian red, suggested by early photos. The setting of St.
Mark's is an important part of its architectural appeal. The chapel sits
on a wooded knoll above the Mount Holly-Hunterville Road, near its
intersection with Beatties Ford Road. Both of these two lane roads have
been important highways through the rolling farmland of north
Mecklenburg County since the early nineteenth century. Stepping down one
slope of the hill below the church is the graveyard, its white stones
marked with the names of the founding families of this rural community.
The chapel is not oriented to the points of the compass. Its nave
entrance faces northwest. Behind the church is John McAuley's wood-frame
parsonage. Its two-story L-shaped form and its Victorian doorway and
porch trim are similar to a half dozen other farmhouses McAuley built in
north Mecklenburg County, according to Mary Ellen Droppers, wife of St.
Mark's current pastor. At one time the Mount Holly-Huntersville Road ran
over the hill between the church and the parsonage, rather than at the
foot of the hill in front of the church as it does today. Traces of the
old roadbed can still be seen at the edges of the property. The rough
wooden building that served as St. Mark's school was located northeast
of the church along this road before it was demolished. Today a one
story brick fellowship hall erected in the mid 1950s blocks the old
roadbed just southwest of the church.
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