West Commerce Street Historic District
Roughly bounded by W. Commerce, Bolling, and Milner Sts., and L & N RR, Greenville, ALThe West Commerce St. Historic District is significant for its association with the railroad and represents the role that the transportation system played in making Greenville a major regional trade center in the years following the Civil War. The area within the district developed rapidly during the late 1850s as the Mobile and Montgomery Railroad was completed through Greenville. Following a period of the depressed economy caused by the War, the district grew into a major trade center on the railroad line between Montgomery and Mobile as the town provided the only shipping point for a six-county region of south-central Alabama. The influx of capital created by this trade allowed the construction of new commercial buildings to replace the original late 1850s frame building in the area. By the early 1890's the importance of the district as a regional trade center diminished as other railroads began to extend into the areas that had depended solely on Greenville's rail service.
The West Commerce Street Historic District is significant for its good collection of late 19 and early 20th-century commercial buildings (c 1880-1920) associated with or dependent on the nearby railroad. The predominant architectural style is very simple vernacular although at least one building 218-222 W. Commerce (c 1890) is a good example of the late Victorian commercial style with a cast iron cornice topped with finials and original wooden framed first floor doors and windows. The railroad depot is a fine example of the Spanish Revival style.
The West Commerce Street Historic District consists of eight commercial buildings and a railroad depot all of which are located near the intersection of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and Commerce St. in downtown Greenville. The railroad tracks cross the street on an overpass supported by concrete piers. The depot is situated on a high bank on a large lot on the corner of W. Commerce and Bolling Streets. The depot is a good example of the Spanish Revival architectural style with a red tile roof, wide overhanging eaves, and stuccoed walls. The commercial buildings were all built at the turn of the century and are primarily very simple vernacular storefronts with the exception of 218-222 W. Commerce (c 1890) which is a good example of late Victorian commercial style.
Historical Summary
The development of the commercial area within the West Commerce St. Historic District was spurred by the introduction of rail service by the Mobile and Montgomery Railroad into Greenville during the late 1850s. The introduction sparked a rapid commercial development eastward along Commerce Street. The early commercial buildings constructed during this period of rapid expansion were all wood frames. The first brick commercial buildings were constructed in the district shortly after the Civil War and 1880.These buildings were the Perry Building; the Perry House Hotel, torn down in the late 1970s, and the McMullan Wholesale building. The Perry Building was constructed during the mid-1870s by J. T. Perry and was occupied at various times by an auction house, a hotel, offices, a packing house, J. S. Kern's General Store, and Dunklin and Blackwell's Drugstore, The McMullan Building is believed to have been constructed around 1870 by J. J. McMullan for use on a Wholesale house.
The buildings that occupied the north side of this block of Commerce past the Perry House prior to the early 1890s were all one-story frame construction. By 1893 the Zeigler Building with its scored facade, press metal cornice, and metal finishes had been added to this block. The building housed various commercial establishments including a grocery store, a drugstore, a battling works, as well as a saloon and liquor store, and a lodge room on the second floor.
The small one-story brick buildings located west of the Perry House site were constructed shortly after the turn of the century and replaced two small frame buildings that were occupied by A. W. Smith's general store and Baker's Dress Shop. The two brick buildings housed a shoe shop, a barber shop, and later during the 1920's W. W. Black's Grocery and the Western Union Office.
During the first decade of the 20th century, three one-story brick commercial buildings were added between the Perry House and the Zeigler Building with the last one constructed adjacent to the Zeigler Building around 1909.
Prior to the turn of the century, the L & N Railroad had provided freight service to Greenville with a large frame building located on the east side of the railroad track. This freight house was replaced in 1902 by a new passenger depot that was constructed near the old McMullan Wholesale House and cotton warehouse.
In 1928 the area around the depot was landscaped and the present concrete steps and fencing were added along with asphalt paving that covered the brick streets. Local significance of the district:
Listed in National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
The National Register of Historic Places is the official list of the Nation’s historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archeological resources.