Cape Fear Lost
Title | Cape Fear Lost PDF eBook |
Author | Susan Taylor Block |
Publisher | Arcadia Publishing |
Pages | 132 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780738501925 |
Progress is a contradictory term, one that inherently means an improvement of luxury and an advancement of technology, yet usually at the expense of a community's identity, traditions, and history. Though many buildings survived Civil War skirmishes and Northern occupation during Reconstruction, these same structures did not escape the plans of ambitious entrepreneurs and thus disappeared from Wilmingtone(tm)s landscape, only to be replaced, over time, by shopping plazas and nationally recognizable commercial facades. Cape Fear Lost celebrates places that have vanished from presentday Wilmington. In this volume of more than 200 photographs, you will be able to explore the Wilmington of a bygone era, one punctuated by unpaved tree-lined streets and architecturally diverse dwellings. As you thumb through these pages, you will experience firsthand the beauty of many former mansions scattered throughout the downtown area, familiar churches, civic buildings and schools that once dotted the cityscape, the many businesses that utilized the pedestrian, horse-and-wagon, and shipping traffic along Market Street, and the transformation of Wrightsville Beach and Carolina Beach from humble summer bungalows into major tourist retreats. These varied scenes allow you an extraordinary insight into this coastal communitye(tm)s changing character over the past century and a half.
Cape Fear Lost Index
Title | Cape Fear Lost Index PDF eBook |
Author | Susan Taylor Block |
Publisher | |
Pages | 22 |
Release | 1999* |
Genre | New Hanover County (N.C.) |
ISBN |
Cape Fear Lost
Title | Cape Fear Lost PDF eBook |
Author | Susan Taylor Block |
Publisher | Arcadia Library Editions |
Pages | 130 |
Release | 1999-07 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781531601225 |
Progress is a contradictory term, one that inherently means an improvement of luxury and an advancement of technology, yet usually at the expense of a community's identity, traditions, and history. Though many buildings survived Civil War skirmishes and Northern occupation during Reconstruction, these same structures did not escape the plans of ambitious entrepreneurs and thus disappeared from Wilmington's landscape, only to be replaced, over time, by shopping plazas and nationally recognizable commercial facades. Cape Fear Lost celebrates places that have vanished from presentday Wilmington. In this volume of more than 200 photographs, you will be able to explore the Wilmington of a bygone era, one punctuated by unpaved tree-lined streets and architecturally diverse dwellings. As you thumb through these pages, you will experience firsthand the beauty of many former mansions scattered throughout the downtown area, familiar churches, civic buildings and schools that once dotted the cityscape, the many businesses that utilized the pedestrian, horse-and-wagon, and shipping traffic along Market Street, and the transformation of Wrightsville Beach and Carolina Beach from humble summer bungalows into major tourist retreats. These varied scenes allow you an extraordinary insight into this coastal community's changing character over the past century and a half.
Wilmington
Title | Wilmington PDF eBook |
Author | Beverly Tetterton |
Publisher | DRAM Tree Books |
Pages | 215 |
Release | 2005-01-01 |
Genre | Historic buildings |
ISBN | 9780972324038 |
With hundreds of rare pictures, this award-winning volume captures the many architectural gems that North Carolina's Port City has lost from the colonial period to the present day. Some were lost to natural disasters like fires and hurricanes. Others fell victim to the "progress" of Urban Renewal or the sometimes short-sightedness of private developers. Regardless of how or why these buildings were torn down and lost, they represent pages ripped from the community's collective history. Preservationist Beverly Tetterton has assembled a collection of lost places that serve as cautionary tales for modern planners and citizens.
Chronicles of the Cape Fear River, 1660-1916
Title | Chronicles of the Cape Fear River, 1660-1916 PDF eBook |
Author | James Sprunt |
Publisher | |
Pages | 774 |
Release | 1916 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
Tales and Traditions of the Lower Cape Fear, 1661-1896
Title | Tales and Traditions of the Lower Cape Fear, 1661-1896 PDF eBook |
Author | James Sprunt |
Publisher | |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 1896 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
Cape Fear Beaches
Title | Cape Fear Beaches PDF eBook |
Author | Susan Taylor Block |
Publisher | Arcadia Publishing |
Pages | 138 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780738505787 |
In Cape Fear Beaches, with more than 200 rare, black-and-white photographs, you will step back into affectionate memory, when early residents slept in hammocks in precarious beach shacks, when grand buildings, such as Lumina and the Oceanic Hotel, dotted the beachscape, when road repair meant a shovelful of oyster shells to mend a pothole, and when bathing suits left almost everything to the imagination. This volume also recounts the black community's experiences along these beaches, primarily at Seabreeze and Shell Island, and shares their personal stories and triumphs in a changing social scene, in which Reconstruction values slowly gave way to Civil Rights-era equality. Throughout the book, scenes of proud fishermen, both amateur and professional, with their daily catches, snapshots of family picnics on the beach, and photographs of friends posed with the ocean as a backdrop remind us that at the beach, the pace of life is measured not by the hands of a clock, but by the steady, changing tides.