Orange County NC Website
>CM c • . as +OGavpHb IQ: 6.JOT8 <br /> �8-26i <br /> UrIited States Department of the Interior 0 6 7 <br /> National Park Service <br /> National Register of Historic Places <br /> Continuation, Sheet <br /> Section number 8 Page 3 <br /> Dr. Arch Jordan House <br /> Orange County, North Carolina <br /> with such decorative features as a tongue-and-groove wooden sheathing which adorns the center hallway <br /> and the upstairs walls and ceilings ; heavily molded and distinct mantels surrounding the fireplaces in each <br /> of the main rooms, and an elaborately curved staircase. While other rural Orange County properties display <br /> Italianate features, the Dr. Arch Jordan house remains the most complete and most ornate rural model of <br /> this genre in the county. <br /> Significant as well in the area of Social History under Criteria A, the Dr. Arch Jordan house and <br /> iated with rural medical practice , the rural economy centered in the cross-roads <br /> property were closely assoc <br /> general store, and the central social institution of the Presbyterian church . Dr. Jordan inhabited the house <br /> from the 1870s to 1905 , using the house as the nucleus of his medical service to the Caldwell community. <br /> He was also quite involved as a teacher and trustee of the nearby Caldwell Institute, a local . school, and <br /> ith his brother a general store and pharmacy across the road from his house. In 1905 <br /> established along w <br /> three nearby Presbyterian churches jointly purchased the property to use as a manse, and ministers living <br /> there from 1905 to 1929 served these local churches . In rural Orange County districts like Little River <br /> Township , dominated by scattered family farms, it was the church above all other institutions that that <br /> ide a center for neighborhood social life . Cross-roads <br /> served to cohere local communities and prov <br /> communities such as Caldwell developed around the key institutions of the church, the school , or the <br /> general store. The Dr. Arch Jordan house, associated with all of these vital rural institutions, provided a <br /> central hub to the social life of this rural Orange County community for over half a century. <br /> Architectural Context: <br /> The Dr. Arch Jordan House is historically significant primarily as a well -preserved example of Late <br /> Victorian Italianate architecture. Its highly ornate and detailed design provides a wonderful example of this <br /> architectural style. Originating in the "romanticism of the Picturesque movement this style was most <br /> popular in the years from 1850 to 1880, although rural North Carolina adaptations appeared into the early <br /> twentieth century.3 Italianate architecture was characterized by overhanging eaves with (sometimes <br /> elaborate) bracketed cornices, "elongated, roun&headed and sometimes paired windows capped with <br /> projecting hooded or pedimented and bracketed moldings, " porches with columns and hip-roofed . <br /> construction, and an- overall projection of verticality -- all features clearly present in the Dr. Arch Jordan <br /> House.4 Dr. Jordan was among those wealthy Orange County residents who "chose picturesque versions of <br /> 3 quote from Gabrielle M. Lanier and Bernard L. Herman, Eve day, Architecture of the Mid-Atlantic : Looking at <br /> Buildings and Landscapes (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997), 147489 Catherine W. Bishir, North <br /> Carolina Architecture (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990), 28 &88 . <br /> 4 Lanier and Herman, E�day Architecture, 149; Sterling Boyd, "Introduction" in Marguerite Schumann, ed., <br /> Grand Old Ladies : North Carolina Architecture During the Victorian Era (Charlotte, NC: East Woods Press, 1984), <br /> 1849 . <br />