| 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
911 Cone Avenue
Pineville, N.C. 28134
3. UTM of Property
17 509347E 3881946N
4. Tax Parcel Number of
Property
22107413
5. Owner of Property
Mark Miller
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 one-story,
cross-gabled house is three-bays wide and three-bays deep. It sits
close to Cone Avenue facing west. A single-bay, gabled wing projects
from the facade. A partial-width hipped-roof porch protects the
remainder of the facade. The porch is supported by metal replacement
posts and shelters a Craftsman-style door and replacement sixteen light
window. Original features include six-over-six windows and
rectangular, wooden vents. The house 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 one-story home was originally located closer to the mill and was later
moved to the south end of the village on Cone Avenue. This mill cottage was
part of the mill village that was constructed in the early 1900s and
continued its expansion in 1920 under the direction of Chadwick-Hoskins
commissioned planner, Earle S. Draper. His plan consisted of a semi-rural
mill village which included a grid pattern of streets and half acre parcels
so residents could grow vegetables and raise farm animals.
The mill-house architecture, consistent with many other Southern textile
villages, reflected the common man. Most of the mill workers were white
yeoman farmers who migrated with their families to larger towns in search
for employment. Families in the mill village led a self-sufficient
lifestyle as they cultivated gardens, raised chickens, cows, and pigs.
Mills provided the worker and his family homes for about one dollar per week
along with water, ice, coal, and wood for the stoves. Workers faced rough
conditions and long hours at the mill as a typical work week lasted six days
and averaged 12 to 16 hours per day. The mill made sure that their workers
could sufficiently support their families.
In the mid-1940s, Cone Mills bought the mill and
built additions onto the mill cottages. Improvements to the homes included
bathrooms and asbestos shingles. Cone Mills eventually ceased renting the
homes to workers and gave them the first option to buy the homes.
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