Franklin Street (Chapel Hill)

Coordinates: 35°54′47.33″N 79°3′20.82″W / 35.9131472°N 79.0557833°W / 35.9131472; -79.0557833

Franklin Street
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Franklin Street streetscape
Erected c. 1790
Location Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Franklin Street is a prominent thoroughfare in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Historic Franklin Street is considered the center of social life for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, as well as the town of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and it is home to numerous coffee shops, restaurants, museums, bookshops, music stores and bars. The street in downtown Chapel Hill is notable for its festivities, nightlife, and culture.[1] The stretch of college-oriented businesses continues west into neighboring Carrboro. Both streets are home to small music venues, like the Cat's Cradle and the Carrboro Arts Center, which were influential in the birth of Chapel Hill rock, and Chapel Hill's Morehead Planetarium and Science Center, as well as the Ackland Art Museum.

Geography

The Varsity Theatre is a prominent landmark on Franklin Street.

The three-mile (5 km) length is divided into West and East Franklin Streets. West Franklin begins at the intersection of South Merrit Mill Road where Carrboro's East Main Street ends. West Franklin moves east-northeast through the town's historic business district to Columbia Street, where it becomes East Franklin. East Franklin continues the straight path through the business district, passing campus and then curving north "down the hill" through some of Chapel Hill's historic neighborhoods. East Franklin Street ends just beyond Ephesus Church Road, where it morphs into U.S. Highway 15-501 towards Durham. Over time, Chapel Hill, as well as Carrboro, North Carolina and Hillsborough, North Carolina, have meshed together[2] to form historically charming communities that offer a wide range of activities and cultural experiences to enjoy. Although Chapel Hill is a part of "the triangle" of North Carolina (Raleigh and Durham included), it is situated further to the west, and nowadays the towns of Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Hillsborough within North Carolina are their own smaller triangle of which local residents can be proud.[2]

Heritage

Named after Benjamin Franklin by the commissioners of the University (Franklin was a proponent of practical education for youth), the street has been in use under its current name since the 1790s, when construction of the University began.[3] The stretch of Franklin from Columbia to Raleigh streets borders the campus, allowing views of wooded McCorkle Place[4] (the North Quadrangle, named after Reverend Samuel E. McCorkle, who authored the original bill requesting a charter from the North Carolina General Assembly for the University in 1784). McCorkle Place is home to some of the school's oldest structures: Old East and Old West Dormitories, Person Hall (originally the University chapel), the South Building (main administration building), and the Old Well (site of the original well for the University).

Just east of campus along Franklin Street are several of Chapel Hill's historic homes,[5] including the President's House, the Samuel Phillips House, Spencer House, Widow Puckett House, Hooper-Kyser House, the Presbyterian Manse, Kennette House, Archibald-Henderson House, and the town's first law office (known as "Mr. Sam's Law Office" - now a private residence). Many of the homes are featured on an annual holiday tour that benefits the Chapel Hill Preservation Society.[6] After playwright Paul Green won the Pulitzer Prize in 1927, he used his newfound wealth to buy a house on East Franklin Street.[6] Green's career is documented in the exhibition "The Paul Green Legacy" at the Chapel Hill Museum, at 523 E. Franklin Street.

The original Chapel Hill High School was located on Franklin Street until, due to desegregation efforts of the mid-1960s, it was demolished in favor of the construction of a new high school across town.[7] The site of the high school became what is currently the University Square shopping center.[7] White Chapel Hill High School merged with the black Lincoln High School to form the new Chapel Hill High School.[7]

Franklin Street has long been a popular destination for entertainment and nightlife for Carolina students, Chapel Hill locals and visitors from Carrboro, Hillsborough, Durham and Raleigh.

"Flower ladies" sold their goods on Franklin Street for more than 50 years from the 1920s on.[8]

Historical businesses

East Franklin Street crosswalk

Five businesses currently located on Franklin Street have been open for more than 50 years: Chapel Hill Tire Company, University Florist, Carolina Coffee Shop, Sutton's Drug Store, and Julian's clothing store.[9]

Celebrations

Franklin Street is home to several yearly festivals/gatherings, some of which are nationally famous:

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Issues

In the 1970s, hippies with street carts on Franklin Street were outselling businesses with storefronts, which led to business complaints and the Chapel Hill Town Council banning street vendors.[22] The council first tried to block sidewalk sales of everything but flowers, but when the street vendors found ways around the rule, the council blocked all street vendors from Franklin Street.[8] As of 2009, the town council is considering allowing street vendors again, although some business owners do not want street vending to be legalized due to the competition.[22]

Franklin Street had problems in 2007 with an increased amount of loitering and panhandling, which was attributed to an increasing homeless population in Chapel Hill and the nearby location of a homeless shelter.[23] The town has vowed to move the homeless shelter to another location, but has not yet done so. At least two property owners have said that they will move the locations of their businesses.[24][25]

See also

References

  1. "Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership - History of Downtown Chapel Hill and Franklin Street".
  2. 1 2 "Violet - A Musical".
  3. "Chapel Hill Historical Society".
  4. "McCorkle Place".
  5. "Preservation Chapel Hill".
  6. 1 2 "Two famous paths cross on East Franklin Street". The Chapel Hill News.
  7. 1 2 3 "A Thousand Words" column by Jock Lauterer, "Chapel Hill High School, 1962", The Carrboro Citizen, December 24, 2008, pg. 8
  8. 1 2 "History of the Chapel Hill Flower Ladies".
  9. "Franklin Street Legends". The Daily Tar Heel.
  10. "JSTOR-The Scholarly Journal Archive - Civil Rights Organization and the Indigenous Movement in Chapel Hill, N. C., 1960-1965".
  11. "Old Colonial Drugstore Shelf from Chapel Hill, Home of the "Big O"!".
  12. 1 2 "Older Stores, Eateries Give Town Character". The Daily Tar Heel.
  13. 1 2 "30 Years at Sutton's".
  14. "The scene from Franklin Street (February 12, 2009)".
  15. "News and Observer: Bonfires mark Tar Heels' win (March 5, 2007)".
  16. "News and Observer: Radical changes for Chapel Hill celebrations".
  17. "Town of Chapel Hill: Halloween".
  18. "UNC GradSchool - Lifestyles: Halloween on Franklin Street".
  19. "Town of Chapel Hill: Halloween 2005 Parking".
  20. WRAL (22 September 2008). "Chapel Hill wants to scale back Halloween celebration :: WRAL.com".
  21. "Fewer people and arrests at Chapel Hill Halloween fest". Raleigh News and Observer. 2008-11-01. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  22. 1 2 "Town Council could allow street vendors".
  23. "Loitering raises concerns in town".
  24. "Is there any good place for a men's homeless shelter?".
  25. "Another business planning to move".
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