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Chatham County Historical Association

Preserving and sharing the history of Chatham County North Carolina

snippets ~ chatham history BLOG

Little Bits of Chatham History


  • 30 Aug 2024 3:09 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    The Hadley Hotel, 1908.

    Hotel Hadley, Siler City. Built in 1907 by Franklin Minter Hadley, the Hadley Hotel is said to be Chatham's "most elaborate eclectic Victorian commercial structure." It represents Siler City's development as a small manufacturing and regional commercial center during the thirty years after its 1887 incorporation.

    The Hotel Hadley opened in 1908, featuring modern innovations found in other, larger Piedmont cities. It was Siler City's first building to have running water--pumped from a well into each guest room--and a central heating system. Many of the hotel guests were traveling salesmen from Greensboro and other larger cities who came here by train and stayed at the hotel while calling on customers in the surrounding rural areas.

    This historic photo of the hotel was contributed to the Chatham County Historical Association digital collection by Jonus Nobels.

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamCountyNC #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #SilerCityNC #HadleyHotel #1900s #hotels 

  • 30 Aug 2024 3:04 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    Meadow Creek School 1915

    Meadow Creek was a one-room schoolhouse located near Sam Fields Road just east of Gee's Grove. The Chatham Record article accompanying the photo notes that the school ran on a six-month schedule, with interruptions for farm work. There was a big wood stove in the middle of the room--and no bathrooms. "Boys went outside to the left and girls went to the right."

    The location of the school was marked when the article was published in 2008, by a large flat rock -- formerly the play area for students -- located in a pasture south of Siler City.

    Thanks to Dawn Overman for pointing us to this photo, which was printed in the 24 April 2008 Chatham Record. We clipped it from there and have posted the list of students below. This picture courtesy of B.T. Phillips, Jr. of Rockingham, who attended the school in 1930. The identifications were made by Willia Phillips Seawell in 1995.

    Shown (L-R) First Row: Wanda Pickett, Willia Phillips, Mark Brewer, Leona Pickett, Myrtle Fields, Blanche Webster, Carrie Webster, Jennings Phillips and Sam Fields.

    Second Row: Teacher Martha Wright, Unknown, Shafter Elkins, Myrtle Phillips, Alma Pickett, Emma Stanley, Arlene Dorsett, Ida Dorsett, Unknown, Johnny Stanley, Sam Phillips.

    Third Row: Sallie Stanley, Grace Phillips, Lula Phillips, Laura Pickett, Alma Lambert, Robert Johnson, and Clyde Brewer.

    Dawn says this photo is the only one she has of her grandfather as a child. Maybe you'll find someone you know as well.

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #MeadowCreekSchool #OneRoomSchoolhouse #1910s

  • 30 Aug 2024 2:57 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)



    Pittsboro Post Office 1939

    Pittsboro Post Office, July 1939 – Pictures from the Pittsboro Dorothea Lange collection. The building appears to be the building where Eric Michaels’ studio is now located (2024).

    Just a month later, in August 1939, a Chatham News article announced that a new post office building was to be constructed “on a vacant lot on the northeast corner of Hillsboro and Salisbury streets next door to the Bank of Pittsboro on the old WL London store site."

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #PittsboroNC #PostOffice #1930s 

  • 31 Jul 2024 4:52 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    Chatham's Historic Goldston Depot being restored by NC Railway Museum.

    The North Carolina Railway Museum, Inc., home to New Hope Valley Railway (NHVR), has received a national grant to help restore the historic 1884 Goldston Depot in its rail yard that will be used to educate visitors. The depot will eventually be used to store and display railroad artifacts and memorabilia.

    The old train depot originally served the community of Goldston from 1884 to 1973. In the mid-1970s, the building was saved from demolition by Goldston resident Jerry Gaines, who moved it a few blocks away and used it for storage for many years. Jerry’s son, Todd Gaines, donated the 23’ x 58’ building to the railway in 2017 so it could be restored.

    The NHVR group plans to preserve the handwritten messages on the interior wall of the depot left by railroad employees, townspeople and others passing through Goldston more than 100 years ago.

    Read more about the Goldston Depot:

    https://www.triangletrain.com/goldstondepot/

    About New Hope Valley Railway

    New Hope Valley Railway (NHVR), the Triangle’s Train, is the vintage railway operated by the North Carolina Railway Museum, Inc. NHVR straddles the historic towns of Bonsal and New Hill, North Carolina, 30-minutes southwest of Raleigh, off of U.S. Highway 1, Exit 89. A real train takes passengers on one-hour scenic rides through the woods in covered, open-air train cars.

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #GoldstonNC #railroads #trains #NCRailwayMuseum #GoldstonDepot #depot 

  • 31 Jul 2024 4:50 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    This great photo of the Thompson School in Siler City has been donated to the Chatham County Historical Association by Katherine Collins whose great great grand-uncle, James Alexander Wilson Thompson, opened the school in 1887 in Chatham. The school was located where Siler City Town Hall was built in 1939.

    Much of the history of the school has been preserved by the late local historian Wade Hadley, who noted that the school "... forms an important chapter in the early history of Siler City." The school, which opened in 1887, was a private boarding school which attracted about 100 out-of-town students each session. It became known as one of the outstanding preparatory schools in the state. The students of the school were "a dominant factor in the social and economic life of the village, which had a population of only 254 in 1890."

    Mr. Hadley’s article about the history of the Thompson School can be viewed on our website:

    https://chathamhistory.org/.../History%20of%20Thompson...

    Mr. Hadley's document contains a photo of the Thompson School as it appeared “around 1924 after being abandoned. Located where Siler City Town Hall was built in 1939. This view is looking toward the northeast.” The photo posted here on Facebook is the best we have seen of the school building in its prime. Our thanks to Katherine for sharing it with us!

    We also learned a bit about the school from a letter written by a student -- shared by Wally Jarrell. You can also read the letter and some background on our website:

    https://cdn.wildapricot.com/.../Letter%20from%20Thompson...

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamCountyNC #SilerCityNC #ThompsonSchool #Education #schools




  • 31 Jul 2024 4:43 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    Bynum Bridge was entered into the National Registry of Historic Places on April 23, 2020. Built in 1922 and closed to vehicles in 1999, the bridge still occupies a place of community importance in the village of Bynum. It’s history, unique characteristics, and place in the community are detailed in this article by Diane Swan and Debbie Tunnell, whose hard work resulted in the historic designation for this Chatham County landmark. Even those who know Bynum will likely learn something from this article.

    A plaque was placed on the bridge in February 2021 noting the historic designation.

    https://chathamhistory.org/.../BynumBridgeAwardedHistoric...

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamCountyNC #BynumNC #BynumBridge #NationalRegister #Bridges


  • 30 Jun 2024 9:30 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    Connie McAdams writes about the discovery of an old cemetery and her research into the Alston and Hill families that lived on the Hailbron Plantation near Pittsboro. Her findings provide a glimpse into life in early Chatham County.

    Read more on our website:

    https://chathamhistory.org/.../CemeteryMysteryatHailbron.pdf

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamCountyNC #HailbronPlantation #HillFamily #Alston #PittsboroNC #1800s

  • 30 Jun 2024 9:25 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    This is Sheep Rock in Chatham County. Where can you learn about Sheep Rock; Chatham gold mines, Chatham flatwoods and the Devil's Tramping Ground, soapstone, quartz, and more? On our website where retired professional geologist Chris Palmer has provided a document about Chatham Geology Facts and Oddities.

    https://chathamhistory.org/.../ChathamGeologyFactsandOddi...

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #geology #SheepRock #rocks #minerals #mining #gold #hydrogeology

  • 30 Jun 2024 9:21 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    This photo shows participants at an early Juneteenth celebration in Texas. A quick search of the Chatham Record revealed no photos or reports of Juneteenth celebrations in Chatham County until recent years. Juneteenth celebrations in surrounding counties were mentioned in the early 2000s.

    Chatham does, however, have a long history of celebrating emancipation, but on January 1--not June 19. There are many mentions of Emancipation Day (or Freedom Day or Jublilee Day) in old issues of the Chatham Record. We found mentions in the 1890s through the 1910s, and such celebrations could well pre-date the newspaper. According to the news articles, the day often involved parades and speakers.

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamCountyNC #Juneteenth #Emancipation #FreedomDay #JubileeDay #BlackHistory #AfricanAmericanHistory

  • 31 May 2024 8:26 PM | Chatham Historical Museum (Administrator)


    The Endor Iron Furnace is legendary in Chatham County--even though it "moved" to Lee County when that county was formed in 1907.

    The Endor Iron Company was chartered in April, 1862. Two months later investors purchased the Deep River plantation of Alexander McIver and constructed a smelting furnace on it. The furnace is constructed of soft local reddish-gray stones and measures approximately 32 feet square at the base and rises to a height of about 35 feet.

    It is likely that the furnace supplied the Confederate arsenal at Fayetteville in addition to small nearby arms factories. The ironworks changed hands twice before a Maryland manufacturer purchased Endor and, with a local partner, invested heavily in the operation. By 1872, their Cape Fear Iron and Steel Company was one of the South’s largest and best equipped iron furnaces.

    Only two years later, it was determined that local mineral deposits were smaller than had first been thought and by 1876, the company had ceased operation. Though most of the machinery was dismantled and removed, the furnace continued operating until 1896 on a smaller scale, serving only local manufacturers.

    Back in 1990, Robert Weisner wrote a detailed article about the furnace for CCHA's journal. He tracked down records and tried to sort out the furnace's story. He entitled his article "Wading through Error and Confusion: An Update of a Study of the Endor Iron Furnace." If you care to know more about the site, you can read it on our website (along with other, shorter articles in that issue): https://chathamhistory.org/.../PDFs/Journal/CHJvol3num1.pdf

    #ChathamNCHistory #ChathamHistory #ChathamNC #EndorIronFurnace #DeepRiver #mining

Chatham County Historical Association

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