W. B. NEWELL HOUSE
This report was written on May 28, 1982
1. Name and location of the property: The property known as the W.
B. Newell House is located at 8325 Old Concord Rd. in the Newell Community
in northeastern Mecklenburg County.
2. Name, address, and telephone number of the present owner and
occupant of the property:
The present owner and occupant of the property is:
Mr. Sam C. Taylor
8325 Old Concord Rd.
Box 361
Newell, NC 28126
Telephone: (704) 597-7699
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 3991 at page
854. The Tax Parcel Number of the property is: 105-021-33.
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 an architectural description of the property prepared by Thomas W.
Hanchett, architectural historian.
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 the W. B. Newell House does possess special significance in terms
of Charlotte-Mecklenburg. The Commission bases its judgment on the
following considerations: 1) William Burns Newell (1856-1927), the builder
and initial owner, was one of the founders of the Newell community; 2) the
house, erected in 1887-88, is the oldest house in the Newell community and
is the only abode of one of the founders that survives; 3) William Burns
Newell was a partner in the community grocery store, which still stands
across the railroad track from the home; 4) the W. B. Newell House is an
interesting local example of vernacular architecture.
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 the
W. B. Newell 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 27.370 acres of land
is $57,790. The current appraised value of the house is $36,620. The
property is zoned RUCD.
Date of Preparation of this Report: June 2, 1982.
Prepared by: Dr. Dan L. Morrill, Director
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Properties Commission
3500 Shamrock Dr.
Charlotte, NC 28215
Telephone: 704/563-2307
Historical Overview
About 1882, William Burns Newell, his brother "Squire" John A. Newell and
his brother-in-law, N. W. Wallace moved to the Newell area, which at that
time was a rural area with scattered farms, through which ran a railroad and
a dirt road to Concord.1 The Newells were originally from Hickory
Grove, and N. W. Wallace was born in Clear Creek township in the county.2
These three founded the Newell community and became prosperous farmers and
businessmen, as well as a powerful trio in the politics of late nineteenth-
and early twentieth-century Mecklenburg County.3 On October 13,
1856, W. B. Newell was born in Hickory Grove, the son of David Smith Newell,
who was also a native of the county, and Rebecca Burns Newell, a native of
Lancaster County, S.C. At the age of twenty-one, he was married to Sarah
("Sallie") Pharr Ervin (Nov. 13, 1856 - Dec. 28, 1947) at the Mallard Creek
Presbyterian Church, with Reverend W. W. Pharr officiating, on November 14,
1877.5 The bride was born in Cabarrus County, the daughter of
Samuel Ervin and Elizabeth Harris Ervin, and the family later moved to
Mecklenburg County.6
In 1887, Mr. Newell purchased a farm of 108 acres lying between the North
Carolina Railroad and Back Creek in the rural county area which was to bear
his family name. The purchase price of $1500 was borrowed from the seller,
M. C. Davis, and was paid off on February 1, 1896. After buying the farm,
Mr. Newell began construction of a sturdy, two-story brick house on the west
side of the property facing the railroad and the Concord Road. The hand-made
bricks for the house were manufactured at the creek by Mr. Newell and a
laborer. They used them to build the entire main structure of the house,
including all of the interior walls, which required a separate foundation
for each room to carry the weight. The thus solidly-constructed farmhouse
was completed the following year, in l888.9 A brick house in the
country was quite unusual in those days, and for many decades, the W. B.
Newell house, the Newell store, and Squire Newell's house down the road
constituted the hub of the Newell community. In 1892, W. B. Newell formed a
partnership with N. W. Wallace and opened a general store just across the
railroad tracks and the Concord road, located a hundred yards or so from his
house. The building presently houses the Newell post office.10
Mr. Newell's partner, Nehemiah Wilson Wallace (1856-1925) was married to
his sister, Rachel Newell, in 1880, and was a dynamic figure in the life of
the late 1800's and early 1900's in the county. At one time, "Sheriff"
Wallace was reputed to own more farm acreage in the county than any other
landholder, most of which was farmed by tenants. He served the longest term
as Sheriff of Mecklenburg County on record, from 1898 to 1919, and held the
post of Commissioner of Public Safety from 1923 to 1925. Sheriff Wallace, W.
B. Newell, and Squire John A. Newell, who raised mules and served on the
Board of County Commissioners, constituted a politically powerful
triumvirate in Newell and the county.11 For W. B. Newell, the
store and farming, which included raising cotton and livestock, proved to be
financially successful, and thus he prospered along with the small Newell
community.12 W. B. and Sallie Ervin Newell had seven children,
the oldest of whom was Dr. Leone Burns Newell, a Charlotte physician.l3
After Mr. Newell's death on December 17, 1927, at the age of 71, Mrs. Newell
continued to live in the brick farmhouse until her own death twenty years
later, she having attained the age of 91.14 The store passed to
the ownership of another son, Willis Warren Newell; and a daughter, Leila
Newell Thompson and her husband, Charles A. Thompson, moved into the house
after W. B. Newell's death in 1927. At that time, the house and its farmland
were valued at $27,000.00, and his personal estate at $5000.00.15
The Thompsons raised their two boys, Charles, Jr. and William, in the
Newell farmhouse. Mr. Thompson worked for the Chevrolet Motor Division in
Charlotte, and Mrs. Thompson taught piano in the home. Not too long after
Mrs. Thompson's death in 1973, Mr. Thompson moved out of the old Newell
homestead, and it remained vacant for a number of years until purchased by
the present owner, Sam Taylor, in 1977.16 Mr. Taylor has gone to
considerable effort to refurbish and restore the handsome nineteenth-century
home, which had suffered extensively from neglect and vandalism.17
It has now regained its former position of prominence in the village of
Newell.
NOTES
1 Interview with Willis Warren Newell by Ruby Caldwell,
Newell, NC, 1972.
2 Charlotte News, Dec. 18, 1927, p. 1; Charlotte
Observer, Dec. 13, 1925, p. 1.
3 Ibid.
4 Monument in the Newell Presbyterian Church Cemetery;
Mecklenburg County Certificate of Death, Book 30, p. 165.
5 Mecklenburg County Marriage Registers July. 1872 - Jan.
1889, p. 162.
6 Charlotte Observer, Dec. 29, 1927, p. lOA.
7 Deed Book 57, p. 126, 26 Nov. 1887.
8 Deed Book 57, p. 127, 26 Nov. 1887.
9 Interview with Mary Kate Newell Hunter, Mecklenburg Co.,
N.C., 12 Sept. 1981.
10 Charlotte News, Dec. 18, 1927, p. 1.
11 Charlotte Observer, Dec. 13, 1925, p. 1.
12 See Note 2.
13 Interview with Mrs. Hunter, cited above.
14 Monuments in the Newell Presbyterian Church Cemetery;
Charlotte Observer, Dec. 29, 1947, p. 10A.
15 Mecklenburg County Administrations, Book 8, p. 57, 28 Dec.
1927.
16 Interview with Mrs. Hunter; Deed Book 3991, p. 854, 22 July
1977.
17 Interview with Sam Taylor, Newell, N.C., 11 September 1981.
Architectural Description
Thomas W. Hanchett
The William B. Newell home is a two story brick farmhouse, located on the
east side of the Old Concord Road in the rural community of Newell, just
northeast of the present Charlotte city limits. Built in 1888, it is an
example of the traditional "I" house form, embellished with trim in the
Eastlake style which was popular in the period. Abandoned for several years
in the 1970s, the home has been sensitively restored by its current owner,
Sam Taylor. The front of the home consists of a two story
hip roofed block. It contains two rooms on each floor flanking a central
hallway. The resulting long, narrow form looks like a sans-serif "I" if
viewed from the air, giving the house type its nickname. The "I" house was
developed in the late 18th century and remained popular throughout the
southeastern United States into the first years of the 20th century, long
after it had passed from favor in the rest of the country. To the rear of
the main "I" of the Newell house are two one story brick wings.
Plaster covered chimneys with stepped shoulders are found between the
main block and each wing. The northeast wing extends back two rooms deep
under a hip roof and contains the dining room and kitchen. The southeast
wing is only one room deep. In 1912 it was given a
gable-roofed second story which is covered with stamped metal "brick"
siding and stamped metal shingles in the gable. At least one of the one
story wings was probably built at the same time as the front block of the
house. A vertical joint through the brickwork next to the center back door
suggests that one wing was constructed after the other was finished. Though
the form of the house was traditional, much of its exterior finish was quite
up to date in 1888. The hip roof with its plain boxed eaves features a
decorative front center gable finished with alternating rows of
hexagonal and "fish scale" wood shingle siding.
The gable has a bargeboard decorated with parallel grooved fluting, an
Eastlake motif carried throughout the residence. The original wood shake
roof is said to be still in place beneath the current asphalt shingles.
Under the eaves a four course band of decorative brickwork runs around the
building. It is composed of two brick courses set sawtooth fashion, bordered
by single corbelled courses above and below. The walls are built of very
rough textured brick handmade near the site by W.B. Newell himself. It is
laid in
common bond with five stretcher courses between headers. Window openings
are tall and narrow with arched tops in the Victorian fashion. Two courses
of brick are used for the first floor window openings in the front block of
the house, elsewhere only one course. Walls are set inward about one inch on
the brick continuous wall foundation, giving a distinct "water table" line.
Just above the "water table" the walls are pierced regularly about every
foot with what appear to be ventilation holes. A portion of exposed brick
under the back porch has painted mortar lines, indicating that the whole
building was probably decorated in this manner before being painted over in
the first decades of the 20th century.
The front of the home is three bays wide. Three second story front
windows and two fast story windows and the front doorway are
symmetrically arranged. Windows and frames had been largely destroyed when
Mr. Taylor bought the house, and the present two-over-two pane
sash are believed to be similar to the original. A one story hip roofed
porch runs almost all the way across the front of the house, shielding the
central front door. Its center bay extends forward to mark the entry, under
a gable whose wood shingles and bargeboard echo those on the main roof of
the building. Porch columns are chamfered at the corners and embellished
with Eastlake style vertical fluting. The are topped by simple Eastlake
scroll sawn brackets. The porch balustrades carry out the Eastlake motif
with more fluting. Only a couple of brackets and a small section of
balustrade remained of the decorative trim when Mr. Taylor began work, and
he has taken great care in replicating missing millwork, guided by extant
pieces and old photos of the home still in the Newell family.
A shed roofed back porch nestled behind the rear wings echoes the front
porch proportions with simpler trim. The side of the "L"-shaped porch which
runs along the northeastern wing has single beaded tongue and groove ceiling
paneling, while the portion along the southeastern wing has newer double
beaded ceiling, indicating the porch may have been built in two stages. One
enters the home through an elaborate machine made Victorian front door,
probably ordered by Mr. Newell from a catalog or a Charlotte planing mill.
The current stained glass windows in the entry are more elaborate than the
frosted glass believed to have been there originally. All interior doors, in
contrast to the front door, are handmade of heart pine with four vertical
panels using mortise-and-tenon joints. All rooms of the house have heavy
window surrounds and mop boards with molding, and there is picture molding
near the ceiling in several rooms. Interior walls are thick because they are
constructed of brick rather than frame.
Each room has a fireplace with a wooden mantel and a stuccoed brick
firebox. Once inside the front door, one is in the long central hallway that
extends through the building. Through a door to the left is the hall. It has
a fine mantel with parallel fluting on its flat surfaces in the Eastlake
manner, plus sawtooth dentil molding. Evidence uncovered during renovation
indicates that this space was originally painted aqua blue with a black "wainscot"
band. Off the central hallway to the right of the front door is the parlor.
Its Victorian mantel, with a mirror and two-tiered shelf supported by turned
spindles, is not original to the house but is said to be similar to what was
there. To the left of the fireplace is a small, low door to the back parlor,
which is located in the southeast wing behind the main block of the house.
Its fireplace, which shares the front parlor's chimney, has a simpler
version of the hall mantel minus fluting and dentils.
From the back parlor one can go through a door into the central hallway,
then across into the dining room which is located behind the front hall in
the northeast wing. This room has a mantel similar to that in the back
parlor. The fireplace is flanked by two low, narrow doors for closets on
either side of the massive chimney. Between the left closet and mantel is an
open recessed china cabinet with a beaded tongue and groove interior whose
molded surround indicates it may be original.
The dining room has a beaded tongue and groove ceiling, which is also
found in the kitchen behind it. The kitchen has all new fixtures and
cabinets. One corner of it has been walled off to provide a downstairs
bathroom, the only floorplan change made during renovation. Returning to the
front door one sees the narrow
stairway with tapered, turned
balusters and open-string
risers rising in a single run from the front of the central hallway
upwards to the second floor. Most of the balusters were gone when Mr. Taylor
bought the house, and he had replacements turned to match the originals.
Upstairs there are three bedrooms and a bath. The front two rooms are
original, with molding and mantels slightly simpler than those downstairs.
The rear southeast room was added in 1912 as Newell's family grew. It has
double beaded tongue and groove wainscoting with a molded chair rail. There
is a matching tongue and groove ceiling with picture molding. The back of
the central hallway on the second floor was closed off at the same time with
a "ransomed door to create a walk-in closet lined with more tongue and
groove. Adjacent to it, across the hall from the third bedroom, is a tongue
and groove panelled bathroom tucked under the slope of the roof.
The surroundings of the W.B. Newell house look much as they probably did
when the residence was built. A windmill, barn and maids quarters that once
stood to the rear of the house are now gone, but its setting of old trees is
undisturbed, and a field at the rear extends to a line of woods. The rails
of the Southern Railway, successor to the North Carolina Railroad, run past
the front of the home. Across the tracks, the half dozen vernacular frame
homes that make up the core of the Newell community face the Old Concord
Road, looking across it and the tracks up at the Newell House.
|