One of the largest and fastest-growing cities in the South,
Charlotte, North Carolina, came of age in the New South decades of
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, transforming
itself from a rural courthouse village to the trading and financial
hub of America's premier textile manufacturing region. In this
book, Thomas Hanchett traces the city's spatial evolution over the
course of a century, exploring the interplay of national trends and
local forces that shaped Charlotte, and, by extension, other New
South urban centers.
Hanchett argues that racial and economic segregation are not
age-old givens, but products of a decades-long process. Well after
the Civil War, Charlotte's whites and blacks, workers and business
owners, all lived intermingled in a "salt-and-pepper" pattern. The
rise of large manufacturing enterprises in the 1880s and 1890s
brought social and political upheaval, however, and the city began
to sort out into a "checkerboard" of distinct neighborhoods
segregated by both race and class. When urban renewal and other
federal funds became available in the mid- twentieth century, local
leaders used the money to complete the sorting out process,
creating a "sector" pattern in which wealthy whites increasingly
lived on one side of town and blacks on the other.