Tag: Cherry Street

  • Corner of Fourth and Cherry

    Corner of Fourth and Cherry

    A small but very rich stone building. Photographers with nothing to do but walk around the streets all day will appreciate knowing that the corner store has an old-fashioned deli counter where you can get sandwiches made to order.

    Floral ornament
    Chatham Place
  • Carnegie Library

    Our Lady of Fatima

    After the library moved to larger quarters, this became Our Lady of Fatima Chapel, and so it remains today. But it still has that Carnegie Library look that was defined by Longfellow, Alden & Harlow. This one was designed by North Carolina’s own Edward L. Tilton.

    Side of the Carnegie Library
  • First Presbyterian Church

    First Presbyterian Church

    First Presbyterian is an empire with multiple buildings on a large campus downtown. The main sanctuary, above, was built in 1971. It has a commanding position and makes the most of it; old Pa Pitt had to stand in the middle of Third Street to get this picture of it. Although the church is in a striking modernist style, it harmonizes so well with the older Gothic Sunday school and fellowship hall behind it that it is hard to tell where the older leaves off and the newer begins.

    Sunday school and fellowship hall
    First Presbyterian Church
    First Presbyterian Church

    At night a lighted cross hovers in the front window.

    The main church and the buildings behind it are collectively described as Building A. Building B, in an uncompromisingly rectangular modernist style, was getting some renovation and probably expansion when Father Pitt visited.

    Building B

    Blum seemed to handle all the construction in downtown Winston, of which there was quite a lot when Father Pitt was walking around.

    Perspective view of Building B
    Building C

    Building C, a postmodernist construction that tries to emulate the materials of Building A, includes the Worship Center, where the “modern” services are held on Sunday mornings.

    Building C
    Building C

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  • Cherry Street

    Cherry Street

    Looking up Cherry Street toward the back of the Nissen Building.


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