Mlilbi rntt^mam 1 Southern Pines Welcomes The New Season To The Sandhills Southern Pines Welcomes The New Season To The Sandhills SPECIAL ISSUE Southern Pines, N. C. December 1951 SPECIAL ISSUE [oore County In Bed Of An Ancient Sea Has Thrived On Its Many Invasions Dts, Lumbermen, Railroaders and sorters Built On Sand and Clay T : — — People Have Moved To Pinebluff For Just One Main Reason By Bill Sharpe (In State Magazine) early morning a couple California traveling the road Carthage motored easily to minence of a slight ridge in e county when some strange lonition led the driver to stop, the top of the ridge they y- )m the dune upon which they a beach of whitest sand ;hed, and in the distance down upon an incredible -a great sea geographically excellent chemical quality and its physical quality is good except for moderately high turbidity in some of the larger streams. Moore has a wide variety of soils—perhaps the widest variety in North Carolina, but it is not conspiculously fertile. It even in cludes a finger of coastal soil which points into the couni y in the vicinity of Cameron. It contains a number of min erals, including gold and coppi'r, but only pyrophyllite (talc) and sand, clay and gravel are cm the murmur of vast and mercially exploited. Its econonu ;ss water, carried to them on mp and salty breeze. But it an apparition. The murmur from the wind passing igh a forest of pines, which was hidden in a morning and the dune upon which stood, and the beach in front were the beginnings of the us Sandhills, of Sea is believed that the banks of are the modified cliffs fa,c- the ocean which once swept Piedmont North Carolina, seashofe stretches across e from Sanford to the west- edge of the county and be- and upon its heights in the al hardwoods of the Pied dwell the descendants of ;rite Scots, Dutch and English :ers. South and east of the is the bed of the ancient sea, sparsely settled by Highland j, but now teeming with a zation which has grown strata of turpentine, great w pine, steelrails, peaches, incongruously, the panicky sion of consumptives and omfort-giving qualities of the ised sand tiself. )ore in some respects is a dleground” county, described ne native as a golden mean, addition to the division be- n clay and sand, the eastern of the county is in the Coast- Lain, the western part in the mont. Y Fine Streams altitude ranges around 600 and while the county has no large streams, it has scores nail ones, including Deep and er Little rivers. Drowning, Governors, Bear, Cabin, IS, Deep, Aberdeen and other cs. Drowning creek, inciden- , is on the highway maps as her river, a designation re- ;d by Moore historians, who the name was foistered upon 1 by Cumberlanders and Rob- ians. The county’s water is of is delicately balanced among agri cultural, industrial and resort de velopments. The countryside is dotted with small lakes and ponds, all of them manmade, and many of them originally used for mills. Thag- gard’s pond, the largest, was yielding bass and grinding grain long before the Revolutionary war. Many Small Tovms It almost perfectly epitomizes North Carolina in having no large cities but several small towns. It is politically Democratic, has a mild weather with long growing seasons, and about 30 per cent of its rather scant population is col ored. It has fair fishing, and bare ly fair hunting, and there is the typical North Carolina smell of tobacco and textiles in the air. It originated in Scotch, English Village Has Thrived On Immigrants Who Came ‘‘Just Because We Like It” in to Beautiful Pinebluff lake, created in 1950 after the old lake on this site had been washed away. A bond issue voted by the citizens qf Pinebluff made possible the building of a fine new dam and a lake side recreation park. The picture above was made during the Moore District fall j:amporee of Boy Scouts in October 1951. (Photo by Emerson Humphrey) farming area. It is the repository of the native lore of the county South Neglected But the ridges of the sand, with their magnificent but unappreci and Dutch settlements, but it had ^ and its indigenous customs, no colonial gentry to speak of, and its history was more one of hard work than of gory deeds. The county historian says there was scarcely a gentleman in colonial Moore, in the accepted sense of the word. But with general statistics out of the way, this middle-state county modern transportation. Lumber Boom The lumber boom, overlapping the turpentine boom, was on, and cutting of thq virgin forest pro ceeded rapidly, continuing until ated stands of virgin long-leaf pine, for a long time were consid ered worthless. This stand was the westernmost fringe of the about 1910. To get the lumber out to the steam lines, lumbermen laid tracks for their tramways, using 4x4 lumber on cross ties appears one of the state’s most inland 150 miles from the ocean exceptional and contradictory. |and extended to the Gulf. The The line between clay and sand pines occupied a country so for great long-leaf belt which swept of 4 x 8’s. It was an era of specu lation, suddenly shifting fortunes, and flimsy development. Manly has had profound effects on the history and economic develop ment of Moore. R. E. Wicker of Pinehurst, historian of the coun ty’s historical society, says that the first settlers of record were on the Deep. River as early as 1747, in a section where Benjamin Williams, colonial governor Of North Carolina lived and is buriedin this section, too, is the Alston House, scene of a Revolu tionary Tory-Whig skirmish. Immigration into this northern portion of the county was fairly bidding that travelers passing through the country detoured around it, because the needle- carpeted floor of the forest did not even offer forage for livestock. Then the first of many infiltra tions to pe:^olate into the Sands begun. Highland Scots entered through the “back door”—coming up from the Cape Fear Valley and following the streams, upon which they established small farms. According to Wicker, they probably did not come by choice. But desirable land to the south- steady in the period 1750-70, and I east had been taken up, and the Carthage, the county seat, was.^ardy newcomers grubbed out a settled in 1786. The clay belt con-I hard living from the streams’ tinues to be the conventional banks. They did not get along excess es a shipping center and boasted 14 stores, 9 of which were said to contain bar rooms. The northern end of the county got railways, too, and the Moore Central, which went into Cam eron, was only recently taken up. The Norfolk-Southern was built in to Robbins. This lumbering was depletion, not development, but indirectly it led to the more permanent pros perity of the region. In the early 80’s, some unknown doctor in the north sent a tubercular patient to Manly in an effort to restore him to health. There he was visited by one John T. Patrick, industrial agent of the Seaboard, and Pat rick, ^alking with his sick friend. Tie Pinebluff library, owned and operated by the Pinebluff Li- •y association, has a history dating back almost 50 years. The sign made by the late Hermon McNeill, noted sculptor, who had a e and studio at Pinebluff for many years. iveyly well with their clay neigh bors. Almost to a man they had Crown sympathies, and the Coun ty swarmed with Tories. The no torious David Fanning organized [them into bodies which harried ithe American patriots, and the [county’s Revolutionary War his tory is mostly concerned with the murder, arson and pillage char acteristic of civil strife. Land Taken Up Building of the plank road coin cided with a new surge in Moore’s development. State-owned land in the Sandhills was now taken up in large tracts, often Of 640 acres or more, and the great pines were bled of their resin, which was dis tilled and the turpentine hauled to Fayetteville. Then came the railways. A. F. Page, who moved to Aberdeen in 1881 from Cary in Wake county, headed a movement in 1885 to build a lumbering rail way westward toward West End. His family ever since has been prominent in local, state and na tional history, and one member, Walter Hines Page, ambassador to Great Britain in World War 1, was one of North Carolina’s strongest and wisest men. The Page railway, eventually extended west to Asheboro was preceded in 1878 by completion of the Raleigh and Augusta Air Line (now the Seaboard). Some what later in 1892 John Blue con structed the 47-mile Aberdeen and Rockfish railway, and the Sandhills at last were bisected by PINEBLUFF MAYOR Practically nobody lives 'inebluff who doesn’t want ive there. From the 1880’s to the 1950’s— he span of the recorded history jf the community some seven ailes south of Southern Pines on Mo. 1 highway—very few families lave made Pinebluff their home hrough necessity rather than choice. Citizens of Pinebluff grant that t is probably because nobody has lad to live there that the town now or at least in the 1950 census as a population of 572, rather han five times or 10 times that number. But they’d rather have happy neighbors than a town 10 -imes its present size. There are no factories at Pine- iluff in which people have to vork and so have to move there because of their jobs. No company maintains district offices at Pine bluff to which its employees are assigned, forcing them to move families to the community wheth er they like it or not. Perhaps the only persons who have ever had to move to Pine bluff are church pastors who have been assigned there in the normal shifting course of their peregrina tions from one charge to another —but if any of these have not liked Pinebluff they have not made it known. And today, one of the town’s most respected cit izens is a retired pastor who, with his wife, so liked thq town that, after serving the church there for inch and eight-inch mains. It is typical of the Pinebluff commun ity’s combination of civic pride and civic apathy that, although the bond issue was carried and the water tank installed, there were only two members of the board of commissioners at the time, because it had not been pos sible to induce ai third candidate to file for election to the three- man board. As one of the two commission ers was frequently out of town on private business, the bond issue and management of this major improvement for the town was handled almost completely by the mayor and one commissioner. Pinebluff residents have been bragging about their water sys tem for almost 30 years, but the election in which only two candi dates for three offices could be mustered has been long forgotten. Bigger Than Appears Many a motorist entering Pine bluff from the North or South on No. 1 highway has noticed that, after passing the State highway city limits marker (including the notation that the town was de clared a bird sanctuary in 1922), he drives for some distance through farmland, on the South, or woodland, on the North, before reaching an inhabited portion of the town. Pinebluff, it seems, is bigger than he thinks. It is. Within Pinebluff’s town limits are farms, forests, one lake now a number of years, returned later H. MILLS either originated or picked up an idea which was to turn the word Sandhills from a description of despair to one of hope. The merits of sand were shortly to be trum peted to the world. Promotion Campaign The railway commenced a sub stantial promotion campaign aim ed first at aiding New Englanders. At that time, “consumption” was the most dreaded of diseases, and Patrick pictured, with perhaps more veracity than he intended, the Sandhills as a healing‘hab itat for the diseased. New Eng landers came in a slow but steady stream, settling along the railway track, and principally at Southern Pines. That stream of emigrants has never ceased. , a had bought 570 acres at $2.50 an acre, which the natives probably thought was a rare bargain for them. It turned out to be a rare bargain for all concerned. Dream Towns The railway promoter laid out, on paper, some “dream” towns, many of which remained just that. Southern Pines, however, was one dream to become a real ity, and into his plans Patrick built features which have blessed and cursed the settlement to this day. His blocks were standardized 400 feet tracts, each bisected by alleys leading into a 100-foot square. Ownership of the squares and alleys is how being disputed. After Southern Pines, he laid out Pinebluff, also originally a health resort, then Roseland 'and perhaps others. Roseland flour ished briefly, at one time boasting a newspaper, the Roseland Enter- (Continued on Page 4) and there used to be two, and, at Pinebluff’s new town hall, remodeled and enlarged from an old schoolhouse building. for a permanent home when the days of his active duty and trav els were ended. Enthusiasm From the beginning, Pinebluff and its inhabitants have had an enthusiasm for their home town that has been termed inflated by the cynical but appears com- I pletely justified by the happy people who dwell spaciously and contentedly there. John T. Patrick, original found er and promoter of the community in the 1880’s and 1890’s, did not limit his enthusiasm when, in a description appended to an 1894 map of the town, he described its qualities in terms not only of the United States but of the entire world. ‘If you want to locate in the Southern States,” the description on the map proclaimed, “recollect that Pinebluff, N. C., is the town that is being rapidly developed by Northern and Southern men and women of energy, enterprise and means. It is one of the health iest locations in the United States and has as fine water as can be found on the globe, as pure as the Poland Springs water of Maine. .” The water to which the founder probably had reference, according to an old-time resident of Pine bluff, is that of a spring now loca ted on the property of the Pine bluff Sanitarium. This water was at one time bottled by Mr. Patrick in five-gallon containers and was used on dining cars of the Sea board Air Line railroad. Pure Spring Water The water of the world-unsur passed spring is not a part of the town’s present modern munici pal water system, but the water in the pipes of the modern sys tem is rated by residents equally as highly. It is pure spring water requiring no chemical treatment. Regular checks by the State labor atories pronounce it pure as it comes from the ground. While more crowded commun ities struggle to float huge bond issues for the expansion of their water systems, Pinebluff residents gaze fondly at their big 50,000 gallon tank that was installed in 1923 at a cost of between $4,000 and $5,000 dollars. Estimates of what it would cost to build it to day run up to $50,000. The 1922-1923 water bond is sue of $8,000 not only paid for the tank but allowed installation of considerable footage of six- least on the map, the outline for a good-sized little city. Even the “built-up” areas of Pinebluff, where the streets have been cut through for years and there are street lights burning on all four corners of the blocks, there are square blocks on which there are only two .or three houses. It is possible to live in the center of town and be out of sight of your neighbor. This real estate promoter’s nightmare is pleasing to Pine bluff residents. They enjoy the spaciousness and grandeur of a large town without the large town’s crowding. For tax revenue the’ dispersion of Pinebluff’s homes is not lucrative—^but the town runs efficiently with a bal anced budget. Town officials ad mit they sometimes dream of what it would be like to collect taxes on &' normal number of homes around the blocks where mocking birds now nest in wild grapevines, but quickly realize that then would follow complex ities of administration that would likely keep them meeting once a week instead of once a month. Then they relax. Town Is Growing Pinebluff, on the other hand, is proud of its development and growth in the past 20 years. From a census count of 289 in 1930. the town listed 330 persons in 1940 and then took its biggest 10-year jump to 572 in 1950. Spotted throughout the community are many new homes. Also important, practically every available struc ture, business, residential or nondescript, is occupied. This contrasts with conditions of about 15 years ago when a town check showed between 30 and 40 buildings of all types va cant. Though residents enjoy the un congested dispersion of their vil lage, every one prefers the pros perity, building and expansion of today to the conditions of 15 years ago. And nowhere does a strang er get a warmer welcome than in Pinebluff. In a greater degree than in most communities, Pinebluff accepts people as they are. Through the years, the town has known and harbored distinguish ed writers and artists, faddists and eccentrics, sportsmen and re tired engineers, lawyers and doc tors and seekers after health and happiness—and it has shown (Continued on Page 8)