Matthews could be called the Little
Town That Could. It might have chosen to bask in the shadow of
Charlotte; instead, Matthews decided to welcome the inevitable
changes that come with growth while maintaining the integrity of
small-town life.
The picturesque town is succeeding with
conviction. Recently, downtown Matthews underwent considerable
construction to produce Matthews Town Center near the old train
depot. The center is home to the new town hall and a library three
times the size of the old one.
You can get a feel for
Matthews’ small-town origins at community events: there are free
outdoor summer concerts and movies at Stumptown Park; a local
farmers market on summer weekends; a Fourth of July parade that
welcomes kids, dogs, bicycles, wagons and wheelchairs; an Art
Fest
weekend in the fall; and a Labor Day celebration – called Matthews
Alive! – with upwards of 100,000 people each year.
Just
outside downtown, N.C. 51 (Matthews Township Parkway) is a magnet
for business growth. It includes Presbyterian Hospital Matthews,
a
102-bed community hospital. The Independence Boulevard intersection
already has huge shopping complexes that include major big-box
retailers, smaller shops and discounters – and more are on the
way.
I-485 is attracting its share of development, including
retail establishments, restaurants, offices, and residential
plans. Businesses such as Harris Teeter and Conbraco have anchored
their
headquarters in town, and longtime Matthews’s firms such as PCA
International, Rexam Corp. and Family Dollar Inc. employ
thousands.

The town’s early fortunes were founded on the
cotton industry. So many trees were cleared for cotton fields,
the town
was originally known as Stumptown, but green space is not absent
today. Parks from the modest Squirrel Lake Park off Pleasant
Plains Road to Mecklenburg County’s 265-acre Col. Francis
J. Beatty County Park on Weddington Road illustrate the
area’s appreciation
for the outdoors.
The commercial development is both
responding to tremendous growth in housing. New communities
both inside and outside the town limits are cropping up everywhere.
Among them is Matthews Grove off McKee Road, which offers
homes
in the
mid-$100s.
While part of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school
system, Matthews prides itself on highly active fund
raising and volunteerism at its local schools. Higher
education is
also part of
the community. Charlotte-based Central Piedmont Community
College’s
48-acre Levine Campus lies at the intersection of U.S.
74 and I-485.
A branch of Wingate University calls Matthews home as
well.
The
ever-expanding Siskey YMCA Branch on Weddington Road serves
families who enjoy an outdoor pool and water-park, plus indoor
pool, fitness
center and day camps.
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