The intersection of Main St. and Mangum St. could be considered the center of Durham. Except for the rather odd Chapel Hill St., Main St. forms the dividing line between "North" and "South" streets, and Mangum St. the dividing line between "East" and "West" streets.
It is at this intersection that Durham as a mercantile entity began, perhaps before "Durham" per se. Main St. through downtown was, prior to the Civil War, a part of the Raleigh Road - connecting Raleigh with Hillsborough (along the general east to west path of US 70, Angier Ave, Ramseur, Main St., Hillsborough Rd., US. 70.) By the time the railroad depot was built at the current intersection of Corcoran St. and the railroad, there was one store in Durham proper - an establishment at the current northwest corner of Mangum and Main Sts., operated by M.A. Angier. This store was, appropriately enough, called Angier's General Store, and the corner Angier's Corner. It was also the location of the first post office in Durham (inside the store) when it was moved from Prattsburg (which was near Fayettville Rd. and Ramseur.)
After the Civil War, other stores were opened, and two saloons occupied the eastern corners of Mangum St. and Main. In 1878, Eugene Morehead, son of Governor John M. Morehead (from whose name the Morehead Scholarship program at UNC derives) came to Durham as an agent of the Department of Internal Revenue, but soon began his own bank, the first bank in Durham, called the Morehead Bank.
Above, the northwest corner of Main St. and Mangum St., 1884. Angier's General Store is on the right, the Morehead Bank on the left.
(Courtesy Durham County Library)
Morehead soon partnered with Gerald Watts to run the bank, and Gerald's son George Watts would, with Morehead, establish "Morehead Hill" (because Morehead won the coin toss) around 1881. In 1889, Eugene Morehead died, and the bank became the Morehead Banking Company, with William Willard as president.
By the 1890s, the wood frame structures along Main St. were being replaced with brick structures. New storefronts were constructed at the northwest corner of Main and Mangum.
The Morehead Banking Company moved to 105 East Main St. where in 1905, it would become the Citizens Bank.
(Courtesy Duke Archives)
Above, West Main Street, looking west from Mangum St. in 1905. The building on the left (south) side of the street is the present location of the Kress Building. The first two buildings on the right side were located at the former site of Angier's store and the Morehead Bank. These buildings would be 102-104 and 106-110 West Main, respectively.
By 1899 102 West Main was occupied by the Haywood King drugstore.
The interior of the drugstore, likely 1910s.
(Courtesy Duke Archives)
In 1906, King sold his interest in the drugstore to DL Boone, and the drugstore became Haywood-Boone. The storefronts at 104, 106, 108, and 110 West Main were occupied by a variety of businesses, for instance, 104 by the Markaham-Rogers clothing store, 110 by Snider-Fletcher Jewelers
It appears that when the fire of 1914 decimated the north side of the 100 block of West Main St., these buildings survived. While every other building in the block was replaced, the facades of these buildings appear to quite similar (102-104 has been altered on the front somewhat, but is the same building).
Above, after the fire of 1914. 106-110 West Main is at the right edge of the frame, 102-104 is not visible.
(Courtesy Durham County Library)
Above, the view northwest from Mangum St., 1930s (after 1933).
(Courtesy Duke Archives)
In 1937, Haywood and Boone sold this store to Walgreens, and moved to Mangum, Parrish, and Orange Streets. Walgreens operated here throughout the mid-20th century. Per John Schelp, who interviewed John Loudermilk, this was the store where Loudermilk picked up a candy bar (for his East Durham girlfriend - there evidently were a few) and flowers were on sale - inspiring him to write the song "A Rose and a Baby Ruth" in 1956.
Looking west from the 100 block of East Main, ~1960.
(Courtesy John Schelp)
West Main from Mangum St., 1962.
(Courtesy Durham County Library)
The Walgreens store in 1963, looking northwest from Main and Mangum.
The stores at 106-110 West Main were beginning to look rather vacant by 1966.
106-110 West Main in 1966.
These buildings were taken around 1970 by the city as part of the Federal Urban Renewal program (along with the building behind 102-104 West Main on Parrish, to be profiled soon). They sat vacant for some time...
(Courtesy Durham County Library)
... before being torn down in the early 1970s.
Sometime after this, the vacant lots were landscaped as park space, which it remains today.
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