Where Old Gastonia Lives!
On Gastonia, On Gastonia. We Are All For You!
JOURNAL
Features of the building also included: Thus the new headquarters of the National Bank of Commerce began its life and took its place as a landmark and a cornerstone of the built environment of the city of Gastonia.
Remember Me as I Was
(Completed May 6, 2008.)
The City of Gastonia is planning to demolish several buildings Downtown for a proposed hotel and convention center aimed at revitalizing the area. There has been healthy debate over the haste in which demolition was being pursued, and, as a result, the project is advancing without first clearing a site.
Most of the debate over demolition has been focused on the three storefronts on West Main Avenue. (These can be viewed as they appeared in happier days in several places on this website.) Almost nothing, however, has been said about the huge monolithic structure that occupies the northwest corner of Franklin Boulevard and Marietta Street and was most recently the First Union National Bank (now Wachovia) Gastonia main office. Like a frail, wheelchair-bound resident of a nursing home or an empty, forlorn Victorian house awaiting the inevitable bulldozer, that building was once young, vibrant, and full of life. Before it is gone and our hope for Downtown's future is pinned on yet another vacant lot, it might be interesting to take one final look...and remember.
In the summer of 1887, Laban L. Jenkins, just out of college, and his brother-in-law, John H. Craig, organized the Craig and Jenkins Banking Company. This was the first bank in Gastonia, and its first "vault" was a money waist belt.
As the city grew, so did its banking needs. On June 8, 1890, the First National Bank was organized out of the Craig and Jenkins Company with an authorized capital of $50,000. The original officers were J.H.Craig, president; G.W. Ragan, vice president; L.L. Jenkins, cashier; J.D. Moore, teller; and Miss Carrie Boyce, bookkeeper. Through the years, a list of the officers of the First National Bank would read like a who's who of the city's prominent citizens and leading businessmen and industrialists.
On Monday, March 13, 1916, ground was broken on the north side of the 100th block of West Main Avenue for the construction of a seven-story headquarters for First National Bank. The beautiful and imposing structure, built of the finest materials then available, was occupied July 28, 1917 . It remained the home of First National Bank and its successor until 1956 and remains to this day one of Gastonia's most recognizable landmarks.
The stock market crash of 1929 and the difficult economic times that followed in the early 1930's ushered in the Great Depression and forced many banks, including FNB, to close. In 1933 it went into liquidation.
***
The NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE was chartered October 22, 1934 and assumed 70% of the deposit liability of the First National Bank of Gastonia. It operated out of the seven-story building originally built by its predecessor. This new bank that had its roots in the old successfully weathered the remaining years of the Depression and provided financial leadership during World War II. In the late 1940's, an annex was constructed on the west side of the building to house the bookkeeping and loan departments. (This is the structure that will be removed as part of the forthcoming renovation of the First National Bank / Lawyers' building.)
In 1955, the National Bank of Commerce sold its Main Avenue headquarters to a local businessman and automobile dealer, G.G. Walker, and announced plans to construct a modern, up-to-date building on the northwest corner of Franklin Avenue and Marietta Street. The annex was sold to John K. Voehringer of Greensboro, who also owned the adjacent commercial buildings all the way to South Street. This property had originally been the town square, and then later it became the site of an imposing Post Office building.
The site of the future bank building was occupied by the former home of Elizabeth Caldwell Wilson, the widow of Joseph Harvey Wilson. Franklin Avenue had originally been lined by the palatial homes of prominent leaders of the city, and the site had been a prime residential location for the Wilson home when it was built shortly before World War I. The house stood across the street from the manse of First Presbyterian Church facing Marietta Street. As with the other homes along Franklin, time had not been kind to it. Until 1949, it had served as the headquarters for the Eagles Club, a fraternal order, and after 1950, it had been cut up into apartments.
***
On October 29, 1956, the Gastonia Gazette announced the official opening of the building. A photograph on the front page featured Mayor Leon Schneider cutting the ribbon to begin a new era of banking in the city. Beside him stood the president of the National Bank of Commerce, J.G. Reading, and crowded around inside the entrance were bank officers and special guests.
A festive series of events accompanied the opening of the building. An official dedication was held on Sunday, November 4 at 3:00PM; on Monday, November 5, stockholders of the bank toured the building at 6:00PM and were treated to dinner at the Masonic Temple at 7:00; on Tuesday, regional bankers were given a tour at 4:30 and a buffet dinner at the Masonic Lodge at 6:30. On Wednesday and Thursday, November 7 and 8, the general public was invited to tours of the building from 5-10PM and to register for a chance to win $2,500 in cash prizes. Miss North Carolina appeared Wednesday night, and on Thursday evening, guests were treated to the music of the Dean Hudson Dance Band with vocals provided by nationally-known big-band leader, Vaughn Monroe. They performed on a stage that had been constructed in the parking lot of the bank.
On November 5, 1956, the Gazette was almost completely dedicated to the opening of the new bank building, which was announced to be one of the most modern in the nation. That day the paper was filled with congratulatory messages from Gastonia businesses and organizations. No detail of the marvelous new structure was omitted from attention.
***
The architect of the new bank building was H. Lloyd Hill of Atlanta, who specialized in bank designs. Ronald Greene, a Gastonia architect, was his associate on the job. Construction was by Ernest R. Morgan, a noted Gastonia contractor.
The cavernous banking floor on the second level could be reached by one of three ways: stairs with sleek aluminum handrails; a gleaming elevator manufactured by the Otis Company; or, most popular, an escalator or "rolling staircase," the first in the city, also by Otis. Every feature was designed for convenience, comfort, and efficient banking operation.
The National Bank of Commerce offered drive-in as well as walk-in banking with three drive-in windows, located under the building on the first level. Access to the bank was through sets of double glass doors located on Franklin Avenue, Marietta Street, and from the parking lot on the partially open first level. Inside, the building consisted of two floors, a mezzanine, and space for the future addition of another floor.
The exterior of the building featured clean, unadorned lines that reflected the most up-to-date design of the time in which it was constructed. The front (south), west, and north sides were faced with Mingle Buff brick. On the front elevation, the bricks were arranged to give the building the appearance of having louvers. On the side and back, they were laid in a running or common bond. On the east side, Indiana limestone formed a solid wall from the second floor to the top of the building. The entrance was accented with Ruby Red Granux, a stone based, man-made decorative structural material. A large limestone band ran continuously around the building upon which the three brick walls were constructed. The structure was designed to withstand an atomic blast.
"National Bank of Commerce" was spelled out in large lighted block letters on the upper left corner of the east limestone facade and on the same relative corner of the brick front facing Franklin Avenue. The letters were designed to be seen from one-half mile away.
Mr. J.G. Reading, the president of the bank stated, "We believe we have ample facilities for many years to come. We think it is truly an addition to the City of Growing Beauty."
A tribute to the new bank building offered by the Akers Motor Lines of Gastonia proclaimed, "The formal opening of this ultra-modern banking house represents a proud day in the annals of Gastonia's business advancement. The new building is not only beautiful to see, but has every conceivable facility for rendering the highest type of banking service with promptness and efficiency."
***
On October 18, 1960, a mere four years after the new building's completion, the National Bank of Commerce was merged into the rapidly-expanding First Union National Bank of North Carolina. It served as the main office of First Union in Gastonia until September 2001, when that organization was merged into the Wachovia Corporation. At that time the building, once the marvel of a new age, was abandoned and left to the winds of change and chance. Now it stands as the first obstacle to a plan that recognizes nothing of its former place in the fabric of Gastonia's architectural heritage.
We should pause for a moment...and remember. TCE
(Sources for this article will be furnished upon request by e-mail.)

Commercial Building, Gastonia, N.C. Published by the Asheville Post Card Co., Asheville, N.C., circa 1940.

Click on image to view slideshow.
Wreckers or Builders
I watched them tearing a building down,
A gang of men in a busy town.
With a ho-heave-ho and lusty yell,
They swung a beam and a sidewall fell.
I asked the foreman, “Are these men skilled,
As the men you’d hire if you had to build?”
He gave me a laugh and said, “No indeed!
Just common labor is all I need.
I can easily wreck in a day or two
What builders have taken a year to do.”
And I thought to myself as I went my way,
Which of these two roles have I tried to play?
Am I a builder who works with care,
Measuring life by the rule and square?
Am I shaping my deeds by a well-made plan,
Patiently doing the best I can?
Or am I a wrecker who walks the town,
Content with the labor of tearing down?
Point proven!
Gastonia's Changing Skyline
(Posted February 13, 2010)
They pulled down the Gastonia Bonded Warehouse water tower yesterday. The old tower, which had stood as a faithful sentinel over the stored raw material of Gastonia's industrial might since 1919, was not even granted the dignity of being disassembled from top to bottom. No, the workmen just used a torch and cut its legs out from under it. It was pulled to the ground where it is being cut up for scrap.
That has been the fate of so much of Gastonia's built environment since city leaders declared it all obsolete by their actions in the 1970's. Since that time, one by one, the landmarks that watched over the lives of this once-vibrant city's citizens have been carted off to the scrap yard and the landfill. As is the case in our country today, where the coming generation is not taught to cherish and reverence the things of the past ("See! This our father did for us"--Ruskin), that past is simply forgotten and discarded. That makes it simple for those in power to have us believe just any old thing!
***
As I watched the tower fall over and over again on the Gaston Gazette's video clip this morning, my mind was swept back to a sunny day in 1969 (I believe), when I was waiting for the light to change at the Airline Avenue / North Ransom Street intersection. The tower had just been given a new coat of silver paint, and I remember thinking, as I gazed upon its crisp, glistening outline upon the backdrop of a cloudless blue sky, how good it was to be a Gastonian. I had been taught to feel that way as I was growing up by my parents, teachers at school and church, and most of the people I came in contact with. Most citizens still lived close to the center city, and it's buildings and landmarks were still part of the daily experiences of most residents and were generally regarded with a sense of pride.
As time passed and the eastern suburbs became "Gastonia" (plastic subdivisions strung together like so many "pop beads"), the old places, filled with people and activity only yesterday, were allowed to crumble and were, one by one, removed from the landscape. An astute observer would think that eventually the few remaining landmarks would be cherished and maintained. (The buildings recently lost on West Main Avenue would still be standing if the City had been responsible simply in the maintenance of their roofs.) That will never happen as long as the idea of new being superior to old persists in society and politics.
***
I stepped out into the adult world (the world that I had been trained to live in and love) in 1973, just in time to watch it begin to disappear like a receding tide. I have, as I suppose many others have, lived my years with a constant sense of loss and longing for the things that had been traded for others that were perhaps a little less human. I know, after many battles to save the old places, that the most I can really do is to preserve the memories of these once-cherished spots so that a future generation in a yet-undreamed-of time might find that the old familiar ways were superior to a constant headlong rush toward the new, especially if the result often proved to be cheap and empty. Thus, I will continue.
By the way, the Gazette stated that the tower had once served a mill.
TCE
From Gastonia, North Carolina, Its Present and Its Future, edited by Joseph H. Separk and published by the Gastonia Commercial Club, 1906.

Postcard published by the Asheville Post Card Company, Asheville, N.C., circa 1917.

National Bank of Commerce 1953 Advertisement.

Architect's rendering of the new NBC headquarters, 1956. (Sorry, best copy available.)

The home of Elizabeth Caldwell Wilson circa 1920, which was removed for the construction of the new National Bank of Commerce building in 1955.(From a postcard published by the Gazette Publishing Company.)
Aerial view of the future site of the National Bank of Commerce building on the northwest corner of Franklin Avenue and South Marietta Street, circa 1940. From a postcard published by Asheville Postcard Company, Asheville, N.C.

An advertising cut of the building used in grand opening literature.
National Bank of Commerce 1957 advertisement.
Aerial view of the National Bank of Commerce circa 1960. From a postcard published by the Aerial Photography Company, Charlotte, Noth Carolina.




Front, east, and rear views of the former National Bank of Commece building
March 16, 2008.
Boomers: Busted? or Saved in the Nick of Time?
(Posted March 13, 2009)
We are the Baby-Boomers.
More correctly, we are the Post-World War II Baby-Boom Generation. We have witnessed more, possessed more, and lost more, without really knowing it, than probably any generation before us in the history of our nation. We came along, from 1945 through 1964, and inherited a world that was (for many of us) new, clean, shiny, exciting, and without limits. Our parents vowed that we would have it better than they, and most were able to live up to their promise. We grew up in television families, wore television clothes, and played with television toys. We went to schools and churches, but our lives revolved increasingly less around them. We finally thumbed our noses at the traditions of our parents, embraced every imaginable taboo, and then went out into the world that we had irreversibly changed to make our collective mark.
An eye winked, and we were old.
After continually doing the activities reserved for the young long after we were, we found that sixty was not the new forty, but perhaps the new seventy. We took the suburban migration of our youth to its logical extreme, and realized that our hearts and our minds were distant from our neighbors (and perhaps even God) as well as from the old centers of things. We discovered that self-gratification led to emptiness and failed to see that only by giving could we receive. We realized our mortality and found ourselves searching the obituaries for the latest of our number whom we had outlived and looking for a quickly-cobbled “legacy.” We found faith in the value of our homes and our retirement accounts: without heart and soul, they alone could be trusted to remain faithful to a generation that had grown to view faithlessness as a virtue.
An eye winked, and they were gone.
What now. Is it all over? Bleak? Hopeless? Are the Boomers busted? Or have we been saved in the nick of time?
We, tasting a bit of inconvenience, disappointment, and frustration, can now curl up and die or we can remember that adversity—real, crushing, long-term adversity—is what made our parents and grandparents the tough and courageous people who gave us such a hopeful and well-meaning start only yesterday. Our course can remain centrifugal, or we can begin today to travel back toward the center, where we were once surrounded by the warmth of familiar ways and places, friendship, encouragement, and love.
Whew! That was close. Just in the nick or time!
TCE
Avenue of Ghosts
(Posted April 28, 2009)
We can really only know the present. The past is a memory without its roughest edges, and the future is a dream, either bright or gloomy. But the present is useless without the bookends of "will be" and "was." One is a course to be followed, and the other is a reverse azimuth, ensuring that we do not stray onto a parallel path that will lose us just as surely as if we had no guide at all.
These are difficult days, we must all agree. Fear and foreboding enshroud any tenuous hopes we might still possess for a brighter tomorrow. It is often sufficient just to salvage the current day and retire for the evening with our personal worlds intact. But there will be a tomorrow for all who live into it as it becomes today. Of that we can be sure. In uncertain times, though, it is often more comforting and reassuring to remember pleasant things that were part of former days.
Memory is prompted by all of the senses, the most powerful of which is sight. To see that which was and still is propels our thoughts backwards through time. Our souls are refreshed by places that are still recognizable as we remember them. The sense of being grounded in place acts as an oasis in an otherwise chaotic world.
Unfortunately, many have lost this understanding of the importance of place in the lives of human beings. They have become so wound up in themselves and the insatiable drive to accumulate possessions, prestige, and power that they have forgotten about things that are simple, pure, and true. When the soul is weary, it is good to gaze upon a sweet scene of "home," even if that consists only of a lone building that evokes pleasant recollection.
Gastonia, to be a relatively young city, has a reckless and cavalier attitude toward its built heritage. To some in positions of power, buildings are impediements to ego, and ego trumps everything else.
If the Big Splash project succeeds, the mid-1960's YMCA on West Franklin Avenue will relocate Downtown, leaving another full block of old West Gastonia desolate. To those who seldom venture west of New Hope Road, here is a short list of that which has been lost in the two blocks from Chester to Trenton streets since the early 1970's. Some of the buildings remain but are barely-recognizable to those who knew them in their former glory.
1. Western Auto Family Store,
2. Piedmont Lincoln-Mercury
3. Sisk Barber Shop,
4. Smith Chevrolet,
5. Powell Oldsmobile,
6. Harris-Teeter Supermarket,
7. Citizens National Bank-Franklin Avenue Branch,
8. Sunrise Dairy,
9. National Guard Armory,
10. Coca Cola Bottling Company,
and just across Trenton Street, occupying two city blocks, sits the remains of Sears, Roebuck, and Company.
If you wish to perform a fascinating experiment, take a photograph of your favorite street in the Downtown area. Put it away, and take another from the same spot five years later. In most places, one would be shocked and amazed at the changes. In Gastonia, one would more than likely be saddened.
TCE
Revitalization by Strangulation?
(Posted September 22, 2009)
I've seen it all--Gastonia's seemingly drunken attempts at revitalization of its Uptown/Downtown, that is. I have walked the streets, alleys, and forgotten places of the old Spindle City with my Minolta SRT 101 35 millimeter camera since 1972 and recorded the ebbing of its life. I have seen it all, and I have proof in thousands of photographs. I have also winessed the devastating results of political meddling and the irreplacable loss that has resulted.
***
"Revitalization" is a word that is thrown around carelessly by planners and politicians. In fact, it has been used so much through the years to describe so many acts carried out supposedly for the benefit of Gastonia's urban fabric, I looked it up in the dictionary to discover its true meaning (even though I thought I knew what the word meant). In fact, I looked it up in several dictionaries that I own and was surprised to find it missing. But my disctionaries (four of them, all old, including an ancient unabridged edition) only gave the root word, "vitalize," which means "to give life." So, the word, which was apparently coined during the disastrous destruction of U.S. cities called "urban renewal" that began in the mid-1960's, actually means to give life...again.
But in order to give life again, a reasonable person would look into what sort of life had existed before. That is not being done in regard to the puzzling and frustrating activities presently happening in and around Main Avenue, nor has it been the rule since the retail hemmoraging of the mid-to-late 1970's.
Most of Gastonia's "revitalizing" efforts have been attempts to remake the area into a desirable place to visit without ever considering what might be the underlying reason to visit in the first place. Narrowed streets and decorative planters installed in 1976-77 were supposed to bring shoppers back, but the Mall was the big thing. Downtown lacked choice, appeal, and convenience, and was quickly discarded as a place to go, except for necessary visits to government offices. (The street people loved the landscaping!)
In spite of the decline of the central business district, city leaders continued to pursue the 1950's dream of lowering the railroad tracks into a ditch. Instead of making Downtown a more desirable and convenient place to shop, the misguided project destroyed about one-third of the existing commercial structures, disconnected the cental city from the railroad (which had given it life in the beginning and offers common sense transportation options for the future), and filled the pockets of local contractors with taxpayer funds.
Benign neglect settled over the area.
Then Gastonia Downtown Development Corporation began its work, guided by solid proven priciples that, if followed to their conclusion, would have truly "vitalized" Downtown again. Their efforts toward success were based upon an understanding of the elements that could have given the city vitality as it once possessed.
But as success began to be evident, local politicians hijacked the process and smugly announced that Downtown would be their legacy. With suburban mentalities and a hireling who neither knew nor cared about the city's built heritage, this bumbling bunch of boobs continued doing things that had been attempted before and had been declared failures by the passage of time.
Their condescending creative process consisted of (as it has always been) building "destinations" for the use of suburbanites, parking lots where usable structures once stood, and parks--even parks strangling crucial connecting streets. Their reality is vinyl-siding, cul-de-sacs and strip shopping centers. They seem to know little, if anything, of the intricate workings of a healthy urban neighborhood.
Downtowns were created as strictly utilitarian places. Each was the axis and soul of its community. They met the commercial and governmental needs of their residents, and they were central points with which their citizens could identify. Downtowns were the hearts of cities, and the streets and avenues that radiated outward and interconnected pumped the lifeblood of civic, commercial, and religious life. This central concept is necessary for any success at "revitalization" to occur.
While Americans are looking with alarm upon a federal government gone mad with its own power, Gastonians should also look at their local representatives with close scrutiny and do evertything they can to rein in the haughty independence and elitism that has found a home in City Hall.
TCE