Carver Inn
Known Name(s)
Carver Inn
Address
701 Preston Ave. Charlottesville, VA
Establishment Type(s)
Hotel
Physical Status
Demolished
Description
Per Sandra DeKay at the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society, the Carver Inn was a large, stately white house demolished decades ago. The first photo on the left is the house as presented in the book, “Charlottesville – The African American Community” by Agnes Cross-White who described the Carver Inn that was located at 701 Preston Avenue as the “premier hotel for blacks in the 1940s and 1950s”.
In the book “Charlottesville”, by Eryn S. Brennan and Margaret Maliszewski, it was noted that the building was originally constructed in 1919 as a home for the owner of King Lumber Company and was intended to be a model of the company’s “high-quality work”.
The second photo on the left, courtesy of the family of Mrs. Beatrice Fowlkes, is a circa 1950 image of the Carver Inn that hosted such distinguished guests as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Hattie McDaniel, as well as individuals and families seeking a rest stop during segregation. The hotel, which housed a private club, also served as a local event space. It offered fine dining, a snack bar, and a beauty parlor.
While not physically located in the Vinegar Hill neighborhood, the Carver Inn was demolished in the 1970s as part of the large-scale urban renewal of the majority African American Vinegar Hill neighborhood.