News
Bookmark and Share text size: A A A

Restored Peeler House brings offices, events to downtown Kannapolis

Tuesday, February 14, 2012 12:00 AM | Printer friendly version Printer friendly version | E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend |



Colleen McDaniel and Jamison Lee have spent the past seven years restoring the historic H.J. Peeler House on Ridge Avenue in Kannapolis. The former private home, used as a funeral home in the fifties and sixties, is now a venue for special events with offices upstairs. Photo by Hugh Fisher.
Colleen McDaniel and Jamison Lee's antique Victrola lends its name to the Victrola Room at the H.J. Peeler House - one of several rooms available for meetings and events. Photo by Hugh Fisher.

By Hugh Fisher

hfisher@salisburypost.com

KANNAPOLIS — Since 1923, the H.J. Peeler House has stood on the corner of South Ridge Avenue and 1st Street.

The brick home has seen the boom and the decline of Cannon Mils, the rise of the N.C. Research Campus and thousands of passing trains.

Many remember it as the location of Lady’s Funeral Home, which leased it during the 1950s and ’60s.

Today, Jamison Lee and Colleen McDaniel have restored it, furnished it and opened its doors to 21st century Kannapolis.

With office units upstairs and rooms for meetings and events below, Lee said the Peeler House is ready for business.

Getting there, however, was a seven-year struggle.

Lee, a Fort Mill, S.C., native, bought the house in 2004 for “about $130,000,” he said.

“I had an interest in old houses and architecture,” Lee said.

So did McDaniel, his girlfriend and business partner, who’s a landscaper.

She had settled in Kannapolis while a student at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

“We were taken by the quality of the houses themselves,” Lee said.

The Peeler House, at the time, needed serious attention.

The interior had water damage. The floors were sagging and the foundation needed to be reinforced.

Only a couple of the home’s rooms were being used.

Much of the original dining room and parlor had been torn out around 1950 when Lady’s Funeral Home converted half the ground floor into a chapel.

It’s not obvious today, with the rooms bathed in light from restored Art Deco fixtures.

The rooms are freshly painted, with carefully restored woodwork and new walls built to match the traces found when previous renovations were demolished.

Undoing the previous changes was the first task.

Lee said he felt it was important to bring the house as close as possible to its original state.

“I felt like the architect knew what he was doing, and that would be best,” Lee said.

McDaniel said there weren’t many photos to go on. The Peeler family was able to provide some information, but much was learned just by looking at the house itself up close.

And it’s still a work in progress.

But the Peeler House is a testament to American craftsmanship, Lee said.

“This hearkens to the days when things were really built,” Lee said.

“You can walk into a million-dollar house today and it has vinyl doors.”

The outer walls are 14 inches thick, made of three layers of brick — no wooden frame.

“You can’t build it today, legally,” Lee said.

Though the house is solid, keeping it that way has been difficult.

Lee declined to estimate how much the project has cost him and McDaniel.

“Let’s just say a lot of time, more time than money,” he said. “Every weekend of my life and every day I’ve had off has been given to this house.”

That’s led, in part, to their decision not to live in the Peeler House.

For one thing, they said, it’s just too big.

“It came to be about appreciating it, enjoying it,” Lee said.

“I’m a steward, a caretaker. We’re just trying to leave something better than we found it.”

He’s started by moving his own office there — Lee runs a video production business — and making ready for others to join him.

He sees the Peeler House’s former upstairs rooms as potential “virtual offices,” short-term spaces leased for a few weeks to a few months.

Downstairs, he said, the restored parlor and dining room provide conference space and venues for wedding receptions, family reunions and the like.

Though the Peeler House isn’t exactly as it once was — among the additions are an entrance elevator and a handicap-accessible restroom — McDaniel and Lee hope the restored home’s charm will be a draw.

“It’s unique, and we really don’t have much like it here,” Lee said.

The two hope to get some neighborhood and community groups into the Peeler House for meetings.

“We just think it’s a cool way for people to get together, to know their neighbors and know the community,” McDaniel said.

Besides that, he asked, “Why does an office have to be bland?”

For more information on the historic H.J. Peeler House, visit www.hjpeelerhouse.com

Contact Hugh Fisher via the editor’s desk at 704-797-4244.




If you would like to subscribe to the Salisbury Post, click here.

Comments

Notice about comments:

Salisburypost.com is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Salisburypost.com cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not Salisburypost.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.
DO NOT POST:
* Potentially libelous statements or damaging innuendo.
* Obscene, explicit, or racist language.
* Personal attacks, insults or threats.
* The use of another person's real name to disguise your identity.
* Comments unrelated to the story.

Full terms and conditions can be read here

Salisbury Post is proud to offer our users enhanced commenting features. You can now build user-to-user connections, follow friend's recent posts, add an avatar that fits your personality, and more.




Most Popular Stories
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Forums
  • Blogs




  
Poll
The current 3.4 percent interest rate on federally subsidized student loans will rise to 6.8 percent on July 1 if Congress does not extend the lower rates. What should Congress do?
  • Extend lower rate
  • Let rate rise



 
 
  
  
© 2011 Post Publishing Company, Inc. |