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Shopping
and Dining near East Boulevard
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| 7
Complete Fashions |
McIntoshs |
| Fuel
Pizza |
Olde
World Reclamation |
| Good
Stuff II |
Pewter
Rose Bistro |
| Hidell
Brooks Gallery |
Tutto
Mondo Night Club |
| McColl
Shiraz Gallery |
Vinnies
Raw Bar |
The
next Trolley Stop is two blocks further north
along Camden Road, at the junction of East and
West Boulevards.
Edward Lattas original impetus for his
decision to get into the streetcar business
was to provide reliable public transportation
to his newly-built suburb of Dilworth just south
of the City. The plan was to sell lots and residences
to the city's burgeoning industrial population,
which composed the essential work force for
the expanding industries. For their new community
of Dilworth, Latta and his partners in the Charlotte
Consolidated Construction Company (known as
the Four Cs) purchased 442 level and treeless
acres. The site was graded and excavated using
mules and carts, and the unpaved streets, 60
feet wide, were arranged in a grid, intersecting
at right angles, and ringed by a grand boulevard.
The present East Boulevard, South Boulevard,
and Morehead Street are part of this ring, the
fourth side never having been completed.
Not coincidentally, the electric streetcars
were placed in full operation on the very same
day (May 20, 1891) that sale of land in Dilworth
began. Electric streetcar service soon proved
its worth in attracting development, as other
residential suburbs sprang up in the knowledge
that they too could be served by streetcars.
Myers Park, Eastover, and Elizabeth, among others,
were all built in the 1890s and early
1900s.
At the grand opening on May 20, 1891, lot prices
in Dilworth ranged from an average of $7.00
to $10.00 a front foot or from $350 to $500
per lot. In that month alone, 78 lots were sold.
After that first rush to buy, however, Dilworth
lot sales slumped. Latta continued to invest
large amounts of money in the suburb, especially
for facilities in Latta Park. A pavilion, bowling
alley, boathouse, shooting gallery, and baseball
grandstand were erected in the spring of 1892.
But the addition of these amenities could not
obscure the fact that Latta and his partners
were in financial trouble.
Just in time, the D. A. Tompkins Company built
the Atherton Cotton Mills just south of Dilworth
in 1893, and purchased an entire block in Dilworth,
on which it erected twenty frame cottages to
rent to its mill hands. Because their employees
found residences in Dilworth, the newly established
industries in the suburb enabled the residential
scheme to survive. Although it was housing for
industrial laborers that ensured Dilworth's
survival, the developers endeavored for many
years to attract affluent and middle-class residents
to the suburb.
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| East
Boulevard, Dilworth, in 1907 |
Between 1894 and 1900 they installed an impressive
array of facilities and services in Dilworth.
In that first year the firm erected a powerhouse
on South Boulevard, which generated electricity
for Dilworth and Charlotte. The company also
constructed an elaborate sewerage system; a
waterworks, and a gas plant.
Latta Park also received notable improvements
in the late 1890s. A bicycle racetrack, a horse-racing
course, a large grandstand, a football field,
a new baseball diamond, and a summer theatre
opened. Service on an expanded trolley network
with double tracks along South Boulevard and
East Boulevard commenced in 1900. Finally, by
1910, Dilworth had been annexed to the City
of Charlotte, and the Southern Power Company
had taken over Lattas power and trolley
monopolies. The Four Cs turned its attention
exclusively to real estate, and began preparing
eastern Dilworth for development. In the summer
of 1911 the Four Cs commissioned Olmsted Brothers,
the most prestigious landscape architecture
and city planning firm in the United States,
to design the street plan and landscape of eastern
Dilworth. Today Dilworth Road and the pleasant
curving streets off Dilworth Road East and Dilworth
Road West bear the mark of this outstanding
design firm.
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Interestingly, East Boulevard becomes West Boulevard
not at South Blvd, as might be expected, but
at Camden Road, on the other side of the trolley
tracks. This is because East Blvd originally
ended at the tracks, and was extended and named
West Boulevard when the residential development
of Wilmore was established in 1914. Developer
F. C. Abbott purchased two farms, one belonging
to the Wilson family and one to the Moore family
hence
the name Wilmore. Ultimately, Wilmore was also
served by a trolley line running south on Mint
St. from Uptown. Today Wilmore remains a residential
neighborhood, with an active neighborhood advocacy
organization.
Many thanks to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Historic Landmarks Commission for the historical
information included above.
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