You are here

Table of Contents

Book: 
Sketches of Charlotte

In 1888, the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce produced a booklet of text and engraved illustrations: Sketches of Charlotte. Despite the artistic title, this was a work of promotion.

Charlotte is not only the busiest, the most progressive and the most enterprising city in North Carolina, but she is destined to assume the position, in the early future, of the most important commercial and manufacturing center between Atlanta and Baltimore. (Sketches of Charlotte, p.5)

The transcription of this work to a digital format could not reproduce the layout or decorative extras  of the original edition. Below, however, broken up under the original headings, is the complete text and illustrations of Sketches of Charlotte, The Queen City of the Old North State, and Mecklenburg, the Banner County (1888).

 

INTRODUCTION

HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE

CHARLOTTE OF TODAY

BANKING FACILITIES

THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

 

HOTELS AND NEWSPAPERS

THE WATER WORKS

THE STREET CARS

THE CITY SEWERAGE

NORTHERN RESIDENTS

 

THE UNITED STATES MINT BUILDING

THE GOLD MINES

THE CLIMATE

THE TRAFFIC IN KING COTTON

EDUCATIONAL

 

THE CHURCHES

CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS

SECRET SOCIETIES

CITY AND COUNTY FINANCES

CITY AND  COUNTY GOVERNMENT

 

THE LIGHTS OF CHARLOTTE

RAILROAD FACILITIES

REAL ESTATE

THE TRADE OF CHARLOTTE

THE INDUSTRIES OF CHARLOTTE

 

THE YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

AGRICULTURE, SOIL, PRODUCTIONS, ETC.

TOPOGRAPHY AND CHARACTERISTICS

COUNTY TOWNS

THE MILLS

 

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

WHAT TOURISTS ENJOY

THE VERDICT OF NORTHERN RESIDENTS

A WORD IN CONCLUSION

 

Regrettably, there is almost nothing about African American people and businesses in Sketches of Charlotte. Readers may consult Fannie Flono, Thriving in the Shadows: The Black Experience in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County (Novello Festival Press, 2006), and the African American Album on this website.

Source: 

Sketches of Charlotte, the Queen City of the Old North State and Mecklenburg, the Banner County. Charlotte, NC: Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, 1888.