Bynum, North Carolina

Bynum, North Carolina A former cotton mill town on the Haw River in Chatham County, NC. It is also known as Bynum Mill Village or Bynum Mill Hill. H. Most bought their homes.

Bynum is an unincorporated community in northeastern Chatham County, North Carolina, United States on the banks of the Haw River. Bynum is 5 miles north of Pittsboro, North Carolina and 11 miles south of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Bynum's most notable building is the Bynum General Store at 950 Bynum Road, Bynum, NC 27228. For many years the store, run by Frank and Louise Harris, was known as Har

ris and Farrell General Store. The post office, once located at an older store to the south, brought everyone in town and many nearby rural residents to the store. Retired loggers, business people, and mill workers often sat on the bench in front of the store passing on news and rumors and telling stories. The store was a natural community center and information hub. When the store and post office closed in 2006, the community formed a non-profit called Bynum Front Porch and kept the store in use as an event and community center. The Bynum Front Porch Music Series runs every Friday evening rain or shine, May - September at the Bynum General Store.[2] Tift Merritt started her music career playing on the General Store's front porch.[3]

The Dr. E. Ward Farm in Bynum is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
The town began life as a "cotton mill town." The original mill was built about 1872 beside the Haw River. There was a wooden dam about 1000 feet upstream and water from the mill race powered water wheels. Later the dam was rebuilt with concrete and electrical generators installed. The spinning mill was purchased by John Milton Odell of Concord, North Carolina in 1886. In stages from circa 1890 to 1910, small two to six room houses were built on the hill above the mill and rented to the mill workers and their families. Bynum was one of the first areas in Chatham County to have electric lights because turbines provided electricity for both the mill operation and the houses. The mill workers were paid in script. The script was only usable to pay their rent or at the "company store" (also owned by the mill). In the 1970s the county commissioners, using federal grant money, bought the 73 mill worker houses from J.M.Odell Manufacturing Company with a Housing and Urban Development grant. With the money the streets were paved, cement blocks enclosed brick piers under houses, electrical boxes were updated and each house was supplied with indoor plumbing for a kitchen and bathroom. The existing tenants, who had been paying less than $10 a month rent to the mill, were given the chance to buy their homes with favorable long-term mortgages. Many mill workers had lived all their lives in these homes. Other homes found eager buyers. Many of the mill workers, suddenly in possession of rapidly appreciating assets, sold to newcomers and bought more modern homes elsewhere. Many of the new owners were college educated younger people, musicians, craftspeople, and artists.[citation needed]

Odell Manufacturing closed the Bynum mill in December, 1983. It was sold to a businessman from the neighboring county who used part of it to make lamp shades, but soon went out of business. The mill buildings sat vacant and decaying for many years, then burned down in March, 2001. Most of the original mill houses are still standing and are now private homes. The former mill site is now part of the Lower Haw River State Natural Area. There is a canoe put-in, trail head and parking lot on Bynum Church Road. A two mile trail follows the Haw River southeast to Pokeberry Creek. Interpretive displays about the mill and the mill village are under development. The turbine building is still standing and the mill race empties into the Haw River nearby. The area adjoins and is managed by the Jordan Lake State Recreation Area. The bridge crossing the Haw River on Bynum Road was originally a covered wooden bridge. It connected the major North/South highway in piedmont area of North Carolina -- with Chapel Hill to the north and Pittsboro and Sandford to the south. The old Bynum Bridge replaced it in 1922 - concrete and approximately an 800 foot span. It was closed to motor vehicle traffic in 1999,[citation needed] but it is currently pedestrian bridge and part of the statewide designated bicycle route. Cars now cross the Haw River on the newer US 15-501 bridges about 1000 feet north. There is another canoe take-out, dam and the mill race sluice gates at US 15-501. Hundreds of Jack-o-lanterns line the old bridge rails on Halloween night from dark until midnight, and local artist and musicians perform. There are haunted houses and trick or treaters at the Bynum Methodist Church and Ruritan Club near the old bridge. The old bridge is also the location of the community's 4 July picnic. The Bynum Community Garden is on Bynum Hill Road. Chatham County's Earl Thompson Park is also on Bynum Hill Road and has playground and a baseball field. The Robert Joseph Moore House and Dr. E. Ward Farm are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Bynum Front Porch Announces 2026 Summer Music Series Lineup - Celebrating 25 Years of Friday Nights in BynumBynum, NC Th...
04/07/2026

Bynum Front Porch Announces 2026 Summer Music Series Lineup - Celebrating 25 Years of Friday Nights in Bynum

Bynum, NC

There’s a certain kind of early-summer evening that only happens in Bynum.

It’s that hour when the heat finally loosens its grip, the light turns honey-gold over the fields, and the pines start whispering like they’ve got stories of their own. Down near the Haw River, you can hear the cicadas winding up, smell somebody’s supper drifting across the road, and feel the whole world slow down just enough to remember what it’s here for: community, music, and a little bit of magic.

This year, that magic carries an extra layer of meaning: the Bynum Front Porch Summer Music Series is celebrating its 25th anniversary. Twenty-five summers of folding chairs, familiar songs, new friends, and the steady, stubborn joy of a small place gathering together week after week.

The Summer Music Series is a long-running, down-home, bring-a-picnic kind of tradition tucked into our quirky little village. The kind where kids dance in the grass, neighbors catch up like no time has passed, and newcomers get welcomed like they’ve been here forever. One night you’re swaying under the pines, the next you’re laughing with someone you just met, and somehow it all feels like the same old song you’ve loved your whole life.

We’re proud to announce the 2026 Summer Music Series lineup, running Friday nights from May 1 through August 28 (with a pause on July 3). This season brings a joyful mix of favorites, fresh sounds, and the kind of nights that end with fireflies in the parking lot and a grin you can’t quite explain.

Summer is knocking, and that means music, chairs under the pines, and another season at the old Bynum General Store. Bef...
04/06/2026

Summer is knocking, and that means music, chairs under the pines, and another season at the old Bynum General Store. Before the first note gets played, though, we come together, as we always do, to get the place ready.

Join us for our Spring Workday

Sunday, April 12
1:00 PM – 4:00 PM

Bynum General Store
950 Bynum Road, Pittsboro, NC 27312

Bynum Front Porch is a volunteer-driven nonprofit, and everything you see out here… the music, the gatherings, the sense of place… happens because folks like you show up and pitch in.

This is one of those days.

We’ll be working side by side, neighbors, students, artists, families, doing whatever needs doing:
• Freshening up flower beds
• Hanging signs
• Sweeping, dusting, mopping
• Painting
• Organizing and general sprucing up

No special skills needed. Just a willingness to help take care of something that belongs to all of us.

Bring gloves if you’ve got them. Bring a friend if you can.

It’s not just a cleanup, it’s a community showing up for itself.

See you April 12.

04/03/2026

Wishing you a Happy Easter from all of us at Al’s Diner.

After months of thoughtful consideration (and absolutely no community input whatsoever), we are thrilled to announce tha...
04/01/2026

After months of thoughtful consideration (and absolutely no community input whatsoever), we are thrilled to announce that the Bynum Front Porch campus will be undergoing a bold new transformation into a modern mixed-use lifestyle destination.

Coming soon: Bynum Commons at the Haw™

The current parking lot will be replaced with luxury condos featuring river-adjacent views of what used to be the Haw.

The historic Bynum General Store will transition into a curated retail experience, anchored by a boutique candle concept and a place that sells $18 toast.

The remaining grounds will be fully paved for convenience, because grass is unpredictable and history doesn’t scale.

We’ve partnered with a developer who specializes in turning deeply rooted, slightly messy, community-driven places into clean, efficient environments with excellent signage and uniform shrubbery.

Honestly, it’s the best thing to happen to the area since Fenton and Sweetwater, finally bringing to Chatham County that same sense of curated charm of Cary and traffic patterns of Holly Springs we’ve all been craving.

We know some folks will miss the old store, the music, the stories, the dust, the weirdness, but progress requires sacrifice, and what better sacrifice than authenticity?

We can’t wait to welcome you to a brighter, smoother, more beige future.

Happy April 1st

Community Yard Sale at Bynum Front PorchSaturday, April 119 AM - 1 PM950 Bynum Rd.Clothes, tableware, tchotchkes, furnit...
03/28/2026

Community Yard Sale at Bynum Front Porch

Saturday, April 11
9 AM - 1 PM
950 Bynum Rd.

Clothes, tableware, tchotchkes, furniture, oddities, and much, much more.

Multiple sellers set up outside the old general store, come browse, wander, and see what you find.

The chairs are set just so, in that quiet way that says something’s about to happen.Saturday morning at the old Bynum Ge...
03/28/2026

The chairs are set just so, in that quiet way that says something’s about to happen.

Saturday morning at the old Bynum General Store. Sunlight slipping through those near-century-old windows, dust hanging in the air like it’s got stories to tell, the floors creaking just enough to remind you who’s been here before. No guitars yet, no banjos, no laughter bouncing off the walls, just a stillness that feels earned.

Give it a few minutes and a couple dozen pickers will wander in, coffee in hand, cases under arms, and this whole place will wake up. Fiddles will find their voices, chairs will fill, and the kind of music that doesn’t need a stage will take over.

But right now, it’s just the calm before the joy.

And if you’ve ever been here, you know… that quiet might be the best part.

Come rock with us.

By the time the sun slips behind the trees and the first notes drift out from beside the old general store, you can feel...
03/25/2026

By the time the sun slips behind the trees and the first notes drift out from beside the old general store, you can feel it, the same feeling that’s been hanging in the air here for 25 years now. Chairs unfold, neighbors wave, somebody you haven’t seen in a while shows up like no time passed at all. The music starts, and it’s not just music. It’s memory. It’s every summer you’ve ever loved, stitched together under a sky full of stars.

Kids run barefoot. Someone’s tapping a rhythm on a chair leg. The families and the artists and the hippies and the good, kind, slightly worn-in people gather close, like they always do, like they always will. The old store creaks and hums like it knows it’s part of something bigger than itself.

And for a couple of hours, nothing else matters. Not the news, not the noise, not the world beyond the trees.

Just the music.
Just the stars.
Just us.

This summer, come rock with us.

There’s something special about seeing a stage full of kids shining under the lights, and this weekend at Jordan-Matthew...
03/23/2026

There’s something special about seeing a stage full of kids shining under the lights, and this weekend at Jordan-Matthews High School’s production of Sister Act, that’s exactly what we got. A few of our Bynum Front Porch board members were lucky enough to be there, and we left grinning ear to ear. Those students brought the house down.

We’re proud to have played a small part in helping fund the production, because investing in our kids means investing in the heart of this community. It’s all connected… the stage, the stories, the support behind the scenes. We’re all in this together, and weekends like this remind us just how good that can be.

Tyler Patterson, a Bynum neighbor and the good soul behind Bynum Electric, has been quietly doing electrical work at the...
03/10/2026

Tyler Patterson, a Bynum neighbor and the good soul behind Bynum Electric, has been quietly doing electrical work at the store, and doing it for free.

This photo shows just one example of the care he’s put into the place. In the area where we plug in the soundboard for indoor shows, Tyler recessed the receptacles so they won’t get kicked or damaged during a crowded night of music and storytelling. A small change that makes a big difference.

This is the kind of thing that keeps Bynum Front Porch going.

We’re a nonprofit, and while donations keep the lights on, work trades and donated services are just as important as any check written to the organization. When someone like Tyler shares their skills with the community, that’s an in-kind donation, and it means the world to a small place like this.

Bynum Front Porch only exists because neighbors keep showing up… with guitars, stories, paint brushes, ladders, and sometimes a toolbox.

So today we’re sending a big thank you to Tyler Patterson and Bynum Electric for helping care for this old store we all love.

It really does take a village… and around here, sometimes that village shows up with wire cutters and a drill.

https://www.bynumfrontporch.orgBynum Front Porch is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in Chatham County dedicated to preserving the ...
03/10/2026

https://www.bynumfrontporch.org

Bynum Front Porch is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in Chatham County dedicated to preserving the historic Bynum General Store as a community gathering place for music, storytelling, and local culture. The organization operates primarily through volunteers, donations, and grants, with only two board members receiving any financial compensation. At its heart, Bynum Front Porch serves a small and often marginalized community along the Haw River, preserving its history, supporting neighbors in need, and ensuring the traditions and voices of Bynum continue for future generations.

Come rock with us.

We’re proud to support the arts in our schools, and especially proud to help bring “Sister Act” to the stage at JM Audit...
03/02/2026

We’re proud to support the arts in our schools, and especially proud to help bring “Sister Act” to the stage at JM Auditorium, March 20–22.

This joyful, high-energy musical comedy (based on the beloved 1992 film and five-time Tony Award–nominated Broadway hit) follows disco diva Deloris Van Cartier as she finds herself hiding out in a convent, and transforming a struggling choir along the way. With powerful gospel music, energetic dancing, and a whole lot of heart, it’s a celebration of friendship, courage, and community.

Bynum Front Porch is honored to sponsor this production. Supporting local arts programs in our schools is part of our mission, because when students are given the chance to perform, create, and tell stories, our whole community grows stronger.

🎭 Performances:
• Friday, March 20 – 7 PM
• Saturday, March 21 – 7 PM
• Sunday, March 22 – 3 PM

🎟 Tickets: JMArtsTickets.com

Come out, fill the seats, and cheer these students on.

Address

Bynum Road
Pittsboro, NC
27228

Telephone

(919) 444-9535

Website

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