The front of the Shelton House, featuring our quilt block. Photograph by Tim Robison, Our State
Stephen Jehu Shelton and his wife, Mahala Conley Shelton (married in 1865), purchase 95 acres of land in Waynesville and hire the architect Henry Napoleon Francis to build a home for them. As High Sheriff of Haywood County, Stephen wanted to be closer to the courthouse, which was located near what is now the Waynesville Police Department before moving to its present-day location in 1885.
It took three years to build the original Shelton House, which consisted of two stories and four rooms. The first floor consisted of Stephen and Mahala's bedroom, the family room, the entryway, and the staircase; the second floor was where the children slept, with one bedroom being for the Shelton daughters and the other being for the Shelton sons. On the night the Sheltons moved in, Mahala gave birth to their fifth child. The Sheltons ultimately had seven children (4 daughters and 3 sons).
In 1880, Henry Napoleon Francis finished adding the downstairs addition to the Shelton family home, which included a dining room and an attached kitchen. This addition came after the Sheltons installed electricity in the house. Prior to this addition, the kitchen was in a separate building to avoid fire hazards.
William Taylor Shelton was the second oldest son of Stephen and Mahala Shelton. His older brother tragically died in a train accident, so as his parents aged William received the first refusal to purchase the home. At this time, William and his wife, Hattie, were living in Shiprock, New Mexico, where William worked as an agricultural instructor with the Navajo; despite their distance from the family home, William purchased the house from his father for $3,000 with life-rights given to his parents.
William and Hattie returned to the Shelton family home after 25 years of living in Shiprock. Stephen passed away in 1913, and Mahala was still alive when her son and his wife returned to the area. Mahala would pass away in 1927 at the age of 83.
William created the upstairs addition to the house, which he operated as a boarding house. It consisted of two bathrooms, a bunk room for male travelers, and two family rooms for travelers who were not single males. Additionally, William started a dairy on the property in the barn. This dairy operated until the 1940s as a place for locals to buy milk and cream.
William and Hattie did not have children, so upon their deaths their eldest nephew, Charles Edmond Ray, inherited the house. Charles had a highly successful supermarket chain in the area and rented the house out to tenants for about 25 years.
Mary Cornwell, the founder of the Museum of North Carolina Handicrafts, purchased the house solely for the creation of a museum when Charles put it on the market. Mary worked for several years as an extension agent in western North Carolina, working primarily with women who were skilled in the traditional creation of crafts. She founded the museum so these traditional crafts would have a place to be seen and appreciated.
The house becomes the first property in Haywood County to be registered on the National Register of Historic Places.
Mary Cornwell passed away at 89 years old in 2001. She left everything she owned, including the museum, to the Board of Directors at the time. Since then, the Board has maintained the museum, barn, and grounds.
The museum becomes the first location on the Haywood County Quilt Trail, a heritage-based project aiming to help communities in Haywood County to tell their stories. The quilt block, designed by Chris Sylvester, incorporates elements significant to the Shelton family history: a star for Stephen's duties as High Sheriff, arrows to represent William's work in Shiprock, and the Milk Maide pattern to symbolize William's dairy on the property.
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