35.994967, -78.895783
As we move east of Roxboro, we move out of a transitional area and into the neighborhood of the East End / Cleveland-Holloway as it existed until the late 1960s.
The 300 block of Holloway demonstrated the mix of houses sizes and styles typical of parts of the Cleveland-Holloway neighborhood, along with a mix of residential and commercial uses typical of earlier neighborhoods.
314 Holloway, 1963 - an exuberant little Triple-A roof Victorian with the unusual 48" wide front door opening / French doors.
February 1966
314 Holloway, along with the remainder of this block, was demolished by the city in the late 1960s via urban renewal. North Queen St. was closed between Liberty and Holloway, and this land became the large surface parking lot for the library.
Looking south-southwest from the intersection of Queen and Holloway, 2007.
This to me, demonstrates not only what has been lost through the city's demolition, but what the neighborhood wants now - small houses, large houses, a corner grocery. This is what gives the neighborhood's fight so much depth for me - because the neighborhood had these things. I don't believe that the city has a responsibility to re-create that environment; but I do think it should recognize its culpability in creating many of the problems that the neighborhood has faced for the last 40 years - and it should not take actions that stymie the efforts of the residents to fix those mistakes.
Comments
Submitted by Jon Thornburg (not verified) on Fri, 8/17/2007 - 10:26am
The details on the Victorian look a lot like those on 1219 N. Roxboro. 1219 doesn't have a 48" door, but the floorplan and architectural details are almost identical. Could both be "catalog" houses?
Add new comment
Log in or register to post comments.