Built in 1952, this was the longtime home of Dr. Emery L. Rann, Jr., (3.9.1914 – 9.15.1996), one of Charlotte’s most important physicians and civic leaders, and his wife Margratha.
Dr. Rann became a major force in the Civil Rights Movement’s drive to desegregate healthcare across North Carolina and he helped lead the NAACP’s nationwide campaign to open hospitals to all. He was also active in dozens of other arenas — from pushing for voting rights, to integrating the board of Central Piedmont Community College, to helping establish the Boulé (more formally known as Sigma Phi Phi fraternity) in the southeastern U.S. He was also a published poet who wrote the lyrics for the alma mater of Meharry Medical College.
When the black National Medical Association elected him President in 1973-74, his views were widely quoted in the national media. Ebony magazine named him one of 1974’s “100 Most Influential Black Americans.”