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Tuesday, October 07, 2008 3:00 AM
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By Mark Wineka
mwineka@salisburypost.com
Jonathan Blackmer, a son of Salisbury's most famous acting couple, wants to demolish his family's historic home on South Fulton Street.
A resident of Alexandria, Va., Blackmer has filed an application with the Historic Preservation Commission seeking to demolish and remove the house at 112 S. Fulton St. The commission will meet at 5:15 p.m. Thursday to consider the request.
Noted stage and screen actor Sidney Blackmer, a Salisbury native, and his actress wife, Suzanne, bought the house in 1933 and raised their two sons here. The Blackmer couple are buried in Chestnut Hill Cemetery.
Sidney Blackmer died in 1974; his wife, in 2004.
A fire seriously damaged much of the home Dec. 1, 1984, and the house's condition in the quarter century since then has been a periodic topic of community concern and debate. At one point, in 1989, the Historic Preservation Commission issued a certificate of appropriateness for the house's demolition but imposed a 180-day delay.
Efforts to rebuild the house faltered, leading to a lengthy public hearing April 3, 1990, in which speakers argued both for demolition and the house's preservation.
Salisbury City Council ended up voting unanimously to rescind the demolition order — the HPC's and council's last official action connected to the house.
Original portions of the house date back to 1821, when it was built as the Salisbury Academy for girls. The Hall House on South Jackson Street was built about the same time as an academy for boys.
Some changes were made to the home in 1889 and the early 20th century. It's a two-story frame house with an attic. After the fire, its portico was removed because of damage to the porch roof and deterioration of the wood sills supporting the columns.
The house is considered a "contributing" structure within the National Register of Historic Places district approved in 1975. It also is part of the locally designated West Square Historic District, which is why the demolition request comes before the Historic Preservation Commission.
Jonathan Blackmer submitted his application for demolition of the house in July, but he asked that the commission delay taking up his request until October, when he would be available to attend.
Under its guidelines, the commission can delay a demolition within a locally designated historic district for up to 365 days from the date of approval of a certificate of appropriateness. Blackmer has applied for the certificate, which is what the commission will take up Thursday.
The guidelines' provision for a delay is intended to allow sufficient time to exhaust all possibilities of saving a building.
During a delay, the guidelines say, the commission "should actively seek to negotiate with the owner or other interested parties to find a means of preserving the building or site."
"The commission should also make it widely known that a significant building is threatened with demolition and that alternatives are sought," the Residential Design Guidelines say.
Progress was made in the spring of 1985 to abate some of the house's more serious minimum housing code and nuisance violations. The Historic Preservation Commission then approved a $12,400 stabilization project in August 1985 by Historic Salisbury Foundation.
In April 1988, neighbors brought concerns about the condition of the property to the city, leading to the issuance of an ordinance to demolish if a building permit had not been secured within 90 days for repairs.
The 90-day period expired, but the City Council deferred acting on a demolition for a few more weeks at the owner's request. The big public hearing came as progress on rebuilding the house was minimal at best.
Several times, Historic Salisbury Foundation has offered to buy the property — first from Suzanne Blackmer, who insisted for many years that she wanted to turn the house into a museum for her late husband.
In 2000, the foundation also offered to pay Jonathan Blackmer $85,000 for the property. By then, Suzanne Blackmer had deeded the property to him. Jonathan Blackmer declined the offer.
Suzanne Blackmer was living alone in the house at the time of the fire. She didn't realize that her insurance had lapsed and didn't have money for the repairs the house needed. She eventually retreated to her New York apartment and lived there until her death.
Sidney Blackmer's acting career spanned decades, from "The Perils of Pauline" to "Rosemary's Baby." Suzanne Blackmer's career included frequent appearances in Three Stooges movies.
What do you think? Post your comment below.
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EP
Historic enclave is a plus : Friday, October 17, 2008 8:30 AM
The perspective that the strategic location of the historic district lowers the crime rate may have some merit. It always helps to have an enclave of vigilant citizens. And it lifts property values that prevent the two drug neighborhoods from completely running down.
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Jerry
The little town that tries, but can't : Thursday, October 16, 2008 9:30 PM
Try as they may, none of those beautiful homes in the hysteric district are more than three blocks from a known drug house. The drug thru-traffic is notorious. Hats off to anyone willing to risk the well-being of their families by moving to that area. It is a neighborhood that bisects two VERY high crime areas in our town. Without it, the gang problem would be even worse than it already is.
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Dan Goodnight
Hysterical society : Thursday, October 16, 2008 1:07 PM
As a Rowan county native and Salisbury resident for 20+ years - i'll stay where i am until i choose to move. I agree with the previous individuals about the "Hysterical society" in Salisbury. Actually, I've called them that for quite awhile - sounds like a lot of others have gotten the same idea for an appropriate name. Many years ago, both Charlotte and Salisbury was about the same size. Thanks to the forward thinking of many Salisbury residents, we have seen amazing growth here!! Of course, you could say that we don't have all the problems of Charlotte like gangs, robbery, murder, etc.. OOPS - well this is 2008 and i guess we HAVE moved to the big times after all. Have a great day....
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For property rights
Put your money where your mouth is : Thursday, October 16, 2008 1:37 AM
Those who want to preserve old buildings should do so with their own money. Put your money where your mouth is. Buy the Blackmer property at fair market value, and do what you want with it. Many citizens choose not to live in Salisbury because of the interference of others regarding property rights.
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B
: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 6:12 PM
Laugh at their tactics you might, but realize that Salisbury would have nothing significant to offer to tourists (or anyone else for that matter) without these people you deem hysterical. Imagine Salisbury without it's downtown, without the Depot, without the beautiful homes. If all of this history and culture is a nuisance to you, leave. Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
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Tired of the eyesore.
Time to Buy it or demolish it : Wednesday, October 08, 2008 5:45 PM
Unless the Historic (hysterical is more descriptive) Salisbury foundation wants to buy the property at fair market value, it should be demolished. The way to control some one else's property is to buy it yourself.
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Jerry
Blackmer house should be "history" : Tuesday, October 07, 2008 10:46 PM
Janice, you had me laughing so hard my side hurts now. Apparently you've been around here for a while, because you pegged the hysteric crowd the best I've seen yet. I remember back to the Bell Tower soundstage proposal, which would have been quite a nice entertainment venue. But no! The hysteric preventionists raised such a hissy-fit you'd have thought someone accused Thomas Jefferson of having carnal relations with the help. Then they fought a losing battle over taking out a couple blocks at the Old English Cemetary, which only a handful of the most peculiar residents carried anything about. They went away when they lost that one. Then came the Fisher Street buildings, which no one wanted to buy, but so many wanted to force the owner (a Church) to pay a multimillion dollar reconstruction. They lost that battle, too. But there is always a perennial hysteric issue that brings them out of the woodwork. And yes, there is a dysfunctional environment in this town that nourishes the weird eccentrics in order to shake down the wealth of this town for donations. It's sort of a hybrid between entertainment and a nuisance tax, but I suppose it pays the salaries for the few who must make their living off the poor dupes who buy into this hype. I'm with Janice on the entertainment, especially since the 365-day delay coincides with municipal elections in 2009. That might bring some common-sense candidates out to "rock the vote," by taking advantage of the kookiness that the incumbent city council typically caters to. We may see 2008 as the year of "change" at the national level, and 2009 as the year of change at the municipal level. Like they say, change is good.
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BEM
RE: Janice : Tuesday, October 07, 2008 7:50 PM
AMEN!!! That's all I have to say to your post. AMEN!!! To Paul...you are right as well. Bulldoze that rat hole, take a few bricks from it, build a nice little stand with a plaque that says "here once stood the Blackmer House..blah, blah, blah..." and put a park there. Wait...that would transfer ownership from the rats and raccoons to the homeless. Bulldoze it, sell the land, build another house on it and put the plaque out front! There we have it!
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Janice
Hysteric Preventionists have a new cause : Tuesday, October 07, 2008 6:31 PM
Paul, apparently you haven't lived here long enough to know that there is a regular entourage of eccentrics for whom this will be the mother of all hysteric events. I won't name their names, but their past causes can be found in a search of the Post archives related to: the Bell Tower sound stage proposal, the removal of two granite blocks from the Old English Cemetary wall, and demolition of the dilapidated Fisher Street Buildings. In case you are new to Salisbury, the hysteric letters to the editor and public comments over this issue in the coming months will provide you with entertainment-a-plenty. Don't expect common sense---only pure hysterical outpouring of emotions by folks whose remaining function in life is to tell other people what they can and can't do with nostalgic properties owned by someone other than themselves. For a while, they will be enabled by City Council (to some degree, since this type of mass hysteria helps the local nonprofit preservationist groups with badly-needed fund-raising), until even the City Council gets fed up with their obstructionist tactics. So bring a bag of popcorn to the HPC and City Council meetings, and prepare to be entertained by some of the weirdest eccentrics this town has to offer.
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Paul Eversing
Let it Go : Tuesday, October 07, 2008 1:13 PM
Time to let the house go. It's beenalmost 25 years and still nothing has been done. It's an eyesore. Tear it down and make it a nice little park w/ benches shade etc etc . maybe a gazebo w/ an entrance gate, have bands on cool summer evenings.. You get the picture
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