Durham County Jail / Tb Sanitarium / Wtvd

36.03141, -78.910208

2400
Durham
NC
Year built
1925
Construction type
Neighborhood
Building Type
Can you help?
You don't need to know everything, but do you know the architect?
Log in or register and you can edit this.


Durham County Jail, late 1920s.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)

Perhaps no building in Durham has been more adaptively re-used than the former Durham County Jail on Broad St. I have yet to fully understand what prisoners were housed on the third floor of the Durham County Courthouse versus the jail on South Church St. versus the County Home in the early 20th century. Regardless, in 1925, Durham County built a new jail to house - at least the majority of - prisoners that had formerly been housed at the County Home/Prison Farm. The new prison was built to the west of the County Home property - I do not know whether the two properties were contiguous or not at that time, but I suspect that they were. Broad Street connected the jail with the city of Durham.

However, the building was only used as a jail for 5 years - a new prison camp was built on Guess Road in 1930, and the building was no longer used / vacant. In the 1930s, Liggett and Myers built a large warehouse complex on the western side of Broad Street, across from the former jail.


Aerial view, looking south. The former county jail is the building in the left foreground with a semi-circular driveway.
(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)

In 1943, the building was repurposed as a Tuberculosis Sanitarium. In the mid-20th century, specialized tuberculosis hospitals were common, where patients would convalesce over an extended period of time - essentially isolated with the hope that their immune systems would be able to successfully fight off the tuberculosis infection.


Former Jail as Sanitarium, 11.20.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)


Patients in the sanitarium, 11.20.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)


Patients in the sanitarium, 11.20.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)

Construction of the Gravely Building, a TB sanitarium, on the campus of UNC (then Memorial) Hospital in the 1940s rendered the TB sanitarium on Broad St. superfluous. (As a side note, UNC is preparing to tear down - or may have already torn down - the former TB sanitarium - a brick structure located on Manning Drive, in front of their shinier buildings.)

After falling into disuse once again, the building became the new studios for Durham's WTVD television station in 1950.


Former Jail as WTVD TV station, 1956.
(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)


Fields behind the building, 1956.
(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)

WTVD was housed here until 1977, when it moved to a former residential area east of downtown that had been demolished by urban renewal in the late 1960s. They built a new studio at Liberty and N. Dillard Sts. which took up that entire block.

The former jail/sanitarium building was subsequently owned by the Family Television Corporation, and I assume it continued to be used as a studio.

It subsequently returned to a medical use, renovated to house a primary care practice. I believe that it currently houses a Duke Family Practice clinic and DTW architects.


Former jail/sanitarium/tv station, 09.30.07

Find this spot on a Google Map.


36.03141,-78.910208

Comments

wtvd donated the building to wlfl ch22 after they moved to the new downtown durham studio in the late 1970's

my memory is probably playing tricks on me but for some reason I very faintly remember seeing the WTVD sign in front of that building, but I wasn't born until 1981....did they leave the sign up until the early to mid 1980's or is my memory playing tricks on me? btw amazing view of the fields that were once in the area through the '50's....definately an example of inner ring suburban sprawl at work

The building was used by Lakewood on Broad, (originally Lakewood Family Practice), headed by Dr. Curt Eshelman (of Durham Central Park) from around 1993 until Dr. Eshelmen retired and sold the practice circa 2000.

Lakewood was previously located in the Gray House at Erwin Mills, and before that, it's original location within, what I believe was the old Century 21 office in the 1800(?) block of Chapel Hill Road.

In the 1960s, there was a swimming hole, which we called "The Rock Hole", about a hundred yards north of this building. It was an old rock quarry of some sorts that had filled with some of the clearest, cleanest spring water I had ever seen. The whole area would have made a lovely park, but I am sure it has all been filled in by now...

In reply to by Phillip (not verified)

Thanks for the information about the Rock Hole. I will add it to my map of the spring sites of Durham and try to take a look, if possible, see if the spring is still active. I am interested in any information of this nature.

Gary, while researching this, did you see anything to indicate whether this was Durham's first TB sanitarium or who owned the land prior to Durham acquired it?

While going through pre-1950death certificates for the piedmont counties, I was stunned at how many showed TB as cause of death.

Those are the first interior shots I've ever seen. Nice work finding those.

Through my child's eyes back in the 60s, the building looked so much more impressive. Maybe that was because of the way it seemed to look down the hill and going toward town on Broad, you rounded a bit of a corner with many trees on the left, then suddenly that hill and building came into view. Then again, everything seems bigger when we're kids. :)

The rock hole, yes, I vaguely remember that now that it's been mentioned.

Just happened by this blog; the comment about UNC's sanitarium got my attention and I did some checking. The description made me think it was the Clinical Cancer Center building close to the main complex (across the driveway from Women's and Children's Hospitals.) However, a document about the then-proposed construction of the new cancer hospital indicates it's actually the Lineberger Center (a.k.a. Gravely Building,) a domed brick building on West Dr. I've no idea of future plans for that structure, though.

The Gravely Building on the UNC medical campus is located on Manning Drive, and is a brick structure situated in front of the N.C. Women's and Children's Hospital entrances. Funds for the construction of the Gravely Building were appropriated by the General Assembly in 1949 and construction was completed in 1953. Gravely was a TB sanatorium until 1975. It is now more commonly known as the N.C. Clinical Cancer Center. As all oncology services will be moving this summer and fall into the new N.C. Cancer Hospital (also on the UNC medical campus), I believe the Gravely Building is scheduled for demolition, as it has been deemed unfit to accommodate the technology required for 21st century healthcare delivery. The Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center is indeed located on West Drive and will remain in use for administration and research, as far as I know.

I can't remember exactly but I believe in the early '90s the Durham Jaycees hosted their haunted house in this building, and I went a couple of times. It was fantastic. The building was very eerie at night and the way they had the haunted house set up there couldn't have been scarier.

I had heard they filled in the "rock hole" because of a drowning. In between ch22 and jaycess operation it was abandoned. We entered the building a few times, late at night in the mid-late 80's. In the basement area were still old bedding and a operating room i believe, spooky. I grew up in the area 41 now. Always was told it was haunted, hence the desire to enter back in my teen days to explore:) I do believe the "rock hole" was filled in because of a drowning, i believe this to be true

I was born in 1978 and don't remember seeing any WTVD signage, but definitely remember a WLFL-TV 22 sign on a post out front, well after WLFL left the facility for 1205 Front Street in Raleigh (now home to WNCN-TV; WLFL and Durham-licensed WRDC are now at 3012 Highwoods Blvd, Raleigh). I don't think WLFL stayed in the building for very long, judging by news accounts from the stations 1981 sign-on. There was also a 150-200' studio-transmitter microwave tower out back (which dated to the WTVD days) which was taken down in 1990 when they renovated the facility as physicians offices. I still have a sheared-off bolt from the tower (complete with aviation orange paint) and the tower base is still there behind the building.

I remember going there in the mid 1950s on saturday nights to watch  jim thornton`s live country music show that was broadcasted on WTVD.

I remember working in the building when it was WTVD from 1956 - 1959 when all TV was black & white and either live or on film. One of our top local live programs was "Saturday Night Country Style" with Jim Thornton. (From "Broadslab, North Carolina", he used to say.) He had some of the biggest stars in country music on as guests.

The tobacco smell from all the nearby warehouses was very prominent on warm, damp days.

I worked in the building as an engineer for WLFL TV22. We had quite a time attempting to reuse much of the old cabling left by WTVD. I was even able to get the old abandoned microwave equipment going to link us to the transmitter site in Apex. During WTVD's occupancy, my father worked to build the set of the Peggy Mann Show kitchen and installed the appliances. Later he joined me in his retirement to work on WLFL in that same building.

WTVD. Durham's TV station that wishes it was in Raleigh, and if someone outside the area watches they would think it was. The building looks better today than it ever has. I've always liked it's frontal symmetry. It was used as a haunted house at least once during Halloween. That was the last time I was in the building and I was allowed to walk thru the old parts I once worked in.

Add new comment

Log in or register to post comments.