Showing posts with label old raleigh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old raleigh. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2009

My World Tuesday #62: Staying Power

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"Family Owned and Operated Since 1874"
Raleigh, NC - November 2009 (Click to embiggen)

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Another shot from the same night as my last two MWT's (The R Line, and The Disco District). The four story red brick building at center frame is now the Raleigh City Museum, a cooperative effort among several non-profit groups. But back in 1874 it was new shiny new Briggs Hardware Co. building, and the tallest building in town. Briggs would retain the title of Raleigh's tallest building until 1907, (though I couldn't tell you what building finally knocked it off that pedestal).

Legend has it that sometime prior to the Union occupation of Raleigh in 1865 Thomas Briggs (the company's already successful founder), saw the writing on the wall and converted all his Confederate bearer notes to gold and silver "hard money". He then selected a distinctive grove of trees and buried the coins there to keep them from falling into the hands of Union soldiers. Then during the occupation, the Union troops set up camp near the grove and cut down all the trees removing the "markers" and making recovering the buried loot ...well... challenging. The legend goes on to say that it took several years before Briggs was able to locate and recover all of the money, by which time the value of gold and silver had presumably risen enabling him to construct his legacy building.

The building continued to house the company until 1995 when the family moved into a new location near the intersection of Six Forks Road and Atlantic Avenue. (Briggs Hardware is still in business, and still wholly owned by the family. How's that for staying power?) The lower floors housed the hardware business, but the upper levels were rented out to a variety of concerns over the years. In the 1890's the Oak City Guard used some of the space for drill practice (that must have made for some interesting shopping experiences) and Raleigh's first YMCA was also housed there at one time (I'm guessing this was before the "Y" had an indoor pool). The building looks pretty much the same today as it did in 1874 and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Fittingly, it is now a museum chronicling the history of the city.


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Monday, September 07, 2009

My World Tuesday #47: "We Got Lots of These"

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"Millbrook United Methodist Church"
Raleigh, NC - August 2009 (Click for detail view)

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Sometimes it really doesn't matter that I don't know the history of a local landmark. Sometimes its enough that it just makes a great photograph. This is one of those times.
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Monday, June 01, 2009

That's My World Tuesday #33: Rex Hospital

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"Then..."
Raleigh, NC - May 2009 (Click to embiggen)

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You really gotta be "Old Raleigh" to remember when this was the emergency room entrance for Rex Hospital. Because Rex moved out of this building back in the early 80's sometime for bigger, better digs out in the burbs. Back in the dying days of the Eisenhower Administration it was in this very building that a 9 lb.-12 oz., 22-inch baby Mojo made his grand entrance to the world. (Not that you should be looking for a star hovering over the roof or anything, it's just an interesting side-note.) In fact, this building isn't even a hospital any longer, though it does still provide emerbency services of a sort. The NC Employment Security Commission calls "The Old Rex" home now, and their job is putting a band-aid on your unemployment pains. I stopped here one evening to snag this photo, but I hope I don't have to visit again anytime soon.

"... and Now"
Raleigh, NC - May 2009 (Click to embiggen)

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This is Rex Hospital today (or as they call themselves now, "Rex Healthcare". And obviously I didn't take this today). I wasn't born here but my sons were. And it was here that my dad breathed his last almost nine years ago now. You can barely make out the original "New Rex" in the middle of all this. The hospital has grown amoeba-like since it opened on this campus and now covers several acres. I don't know that I could even find my way around the hospital now, but if I needed help, I could always call on my neighbor , who's much more familiar with the place than I am. (And probably much more familiar with it than she'd like.)Violence UnSilenced
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