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A Glance At The Past:
THE CAPTAIN JAMES WHITE AND EMMA HOLT
WHITE HOUSE
Captain James Wilson White. Co. "H" 1st South
Carolina Cavalry, CSA in his confederate Army Uniform
in the 1860's
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After the War Between the States,
Captain James Wilson White, Co. "H", first
Carolina Calvary, returned home in Fort Mill, South
Carolina to help run his father's plantation.
The main crop was cotton.
In Alamance County, the textile industry was growing,
creating a good market for cotton. Captain
White decided to come to Alamance County to sell
his cotton to the mills run by Edwin Michael Holt.
While in Alamance County, Captain White met and
fell in love with E.M. Holt's youngest daughter,
Emma Virginia. The handsome couple married
on April 26, 1871.
E.M. Holt loved his daughters and didn't want
to see them move away from Alamance County.
To keep them near home, he built each one a large
house on property he owned on South Main Street
in Graham.
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His oldest daughter,
Frances Annie (Fannie) Holt Williamson had her home
beside Emmas. The Graham municipal building
is now located on the site of this house.
Mary Elizabeth Holt, the second
child, married Captain James Nathaniel Williamson
on October 26, 1865. He was not kin to his brother-in-law
James. Mary"s house on the first lot
south of the Court Square on South Main Street,
at the corner of Main and Pine Streets. It
is now the Bank of America facility. E.M.
Holt also built a house for his son, Lynn Banks
Holt on Maple Street, directly behind the White
House. It was torn down in the 1950's.
Several of the architectural pieces are now located
in the Captain White House.
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Emma Virginia Holt White as a young lady.
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This photograph was taken in the early
1990's. Probably
before 1910.
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The house for Emma and Captain
James White was built next door to the J.L Williamson
house. The houses were separated by an alley,
which extended from Main to Maple Streets and
by picket fences. The house was completed
in 1873. The style is Queen Anna Revival,
though Victoria was Queen of England at the time.
The house had the symmetry and practicality of
an earlier period, having fewer decorations that
characterized the architecture of the time.
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The White House originally had nine rooms plus large
front and back halls and porches. Later, another
room was added on the south side, along with a balcony.
The house was of wooden frame and clapboard siding. Rising
four feet above the ground level, the foundation was of
brick covered with stucco. The roof was slate except
for the addition, which was copper.
The original color
of the house was yellow with white trim, later to
be painted white with dark green blinds. All
windows were double-hung and rectangular except
for the Gothic window in the front center.
The original front door was double, with narrow
beveled glass windows on each side. When the
McClure family bought the house in the 1950's, they
changed it to a single door with an arched transom
window above. The side windows remained the
same.
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This
is what the White House looks like today.
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A
recent photo taken of the original livingroom.
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The floors were originally wide
board pine planks; some of these still remain
upstairs. In 1927, the house was remodeled
and narrow hard wood flooring was laid on top
of the pine. The hearths and fireplaces
were made of imported tiles and the mantles were
handcrafted, many of marble. In the back of the
house was an "L" shaped back porch.
From here, doors opened to the kitchen, dining
room, and back hall, and later, the downstairs
bathroom.
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A trap door on the floor led to a small basement.
The McClures, later, included the porch into what is now
the den. At some time, a one-story addition was
added to the south side of the house, possibly in the
1880's when Emily Farish Holt came to live with her daughter"s
family. The new addition had a large bedroom, bath
and closets, along with a separate chimney and fireplace
built on the south side.
As one enters the front door, the large front hall is
just inside. Squared wooden arches open from the
hall into the living room (left), the parlor (right),
and the back hall (rear). The walls had been used
to hang large family portraits, mirrors, and game trophies.
The ceilings vary height with the original plaster moldings
around the light fixtures. The living room contained
a built-in bookcase in one corner and a large, ornate,
glass front bookcase in another corner. This bookcase
was affectionately called "the thing."
By the built-in bookcase was the "Poppa Bear"
chair reserved for the man of the house. The family
clock, kept on the mantle, was wound each week just before
Sunday school. While the living room served as the
general living area, the parlor wasn't used much.
The parlor was more formal and contained items
like their Steinway baby grand piano, a large gold-framed
mirror, furniture, and a red mahogany Victorola
phonograph with gold leaf scrolls.
The back hall had doors opening to the back
porch, dining room, and the dressing room.
The landing in the staircase was large enough to
hold a grandfather clock and a spinning wheel.
Besides the staircase was a chest for linen storage
and a hat rack. A telephone table by the cove
held the phone #514, in which the ring could be
heard throughout the entire house. |

A recent photograph taken of the original diningroom.
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During the renovations of 1927, a switch was placed
in the floor connected to a bell in the kitchen.
The switch was pressed with the foot to summon people
to the table. In the corner of the kitchen was a
pantry where the icebox was kept, until the "real"
refrigerator was installed. Originally, to cook
food there was a fireplace in the kitchen. Then,
a wood and/or coal burning stove was placed in front of
the fireplace and vented through the flue. The range
was a huge iron monster made by "Majestic".
In the early 1930's, an electric stove was added.
Now, the kitchen has been modernized with new cabinets,
floor, and up-to-date appliances.
Lighting in the house was originally by candles and
lamps until the 1890's, when the "Gaslight Era"
arrived. Gas fixtures were added to each room.
When electricity came to Graham in 1905, the house was
wired. The wires were open to view and attached
to ceramic insulators nailed to the walls. The controls
were rotary or knife switches on the walls or by pull
cords with switches at the base of the bare or shaded
bulbs. Some of the original wiring can still
be seen in the closets. When the house was renovated
in 1927, the wiring was placed behind the walls.
Heating went from fireplaces to burning wood, and later
coal. In the early 20's, "vapor heat"
was installed. A coal-fired boiler that heated water at
a reduced pressure produced this type of heat. Then
the steam "vapor" was piped to the radiators
in the rooms. In the 1930's, an "Iron Fireman"
was installed to alleviate the constant stoking and banking
of the fire.
Directly in the back of the main house, a small servant's
house was provided. There were also two fenced-in
barns and two tenant houses. Besides the servant"s
house, the other outhouse was the schoolhouse. When
the children grew up and went off to school, the building
was used for storage. The schoolhouse was destroyed
during a storm when an oak tree fell and crushed it.
After World War II, Griffen and Elizabeth McClure who
had live across the street, acquired the property and
moved into the White House. The garden land had
been sold and two houses were built there. They
made many changes to the house, such as closing the two
south windows in the downstairs bedroom, incorporating
the back porch into a small den, and replacing the double
front door with a single door with a transom window above
it. They demolished several of the outhouses, removed
the concrete cap on the old well and filled it in. The
kitchen was completely rebuilt and the fences and "rockery"
were eliminated.
The McClures lived in the house until their deaths,
where they raised their three children; Elizabeth, Martha,
and James. Both of their daughters, Mary Elizabeth
McClure Phillips and Martha McClure Hathaway were married
in the White House. After the deaths of Griffen
and Elizabeth McClure, their daughter, Mary Elizabeth
McClure Phillips lived in the house until 1990, when it
was sold to the town of Graham.
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