| Pineville Historic Survey
Form Prepared by Paul Archambault for the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission, 2004.

Photographs of Property
(front and side elevations)



1. Name of Property if any
Unknown
2. Street Address, including
City and Zip Code
901 Cone Avenue
Pineville, N.C. 28134
3. UTM of Property
17 509433E 3882023N
4. Tax Parcel Number of
Property
22107407
5. Owner of Property
David Lingerfelt and Carter Tracy
6. Period or Date of
Construction
1911
7. Source of Information for
#6.
Mecklenburg County Tax Records
8. Present use of Property
J
a. Agricultural, b. Commercial, c.
Educational, d. Entertainment, e. Government, f. Industrial, g.
Military, h. Museum, i. Park, j. Private Residence, k. Religious, l. Other
10. Architectural Style
The two-story,
cross-gabled house sits close to Cone Avenue facing west. It is
three-bays wide and three-bays deep with a pronounced roof overhang
supported by brackets. The facade is symmetrical with two gabled dormers on
the second-story. The roof protects a Craftsman-style, full-width porch and
is supported by half tapered posts which rest on wood and tall brick piers.
It shelters two replacement windows and a fanlight door. Additional
features of the house include replacement windows on the first and second
story and an internal chimney located behind the ridge line of the roof.
A porch extends from the rear elevation of the house. The home is
covered with vinyl and sits on brick piers, which have been infilled with
block.
11. Architectural Significance
A
a. Outstanding, b. Excellent, c. Notable, d.
Commonplace
12. Map Showing Location of
Property

13. Paragraph Briefly
Summarizing Known History Of The Property.
The story-and-a-half framed Bungalow homes, built during the
post World War I expansion of the mill village, were originally occupied by
the mill’s foremen. These domiciles were representative of the mail-order
housing market which had a tremendous influence in the mill villages and
suburbs in the 1910s and 1920s. Earle Draper, designer of the mill village,
ordered plans and materials from a company in Charleston, South Carolina
called “Quick-bill Bungalows.”
In 1946, The Dover Yarn Mill sold the mill to
Cone Mills. The new company built additions to the mill, which included a
new weave room. In addition, they renovated the mill village by adding
bathrooms and asbestos shingles to the homes. Eventually, Cone Mills ceased
their rental business and initially offered to sell the domiciles to the
employees. The new owners continued to make improvements to the homes.
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