Report of the Department of Labor and Printing of the State of North Carolina |
Previous | 33 of 66 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
Subset |


-
413344.pdf
[23.74 MB MB]]
Link will provide options to open or save document.
File Format:
Adobe Acrobat
7^
of rtje
®nibersiltp of iSortfj Carolina
^fjiis boofe toas; presienteti
fap
C33/ _ r
9 a T-b.
UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL
00033934654
FOR USE ONLY IN
THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
Ensuring Democracy through Digital Access (NC-LSTA)
http://www.archive.org/details/reportofdept192526nort
THIRTY-FIFTH REPORT
OF THE
Department of Labor and Printing
OF THE
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
19254926
FRANK D. GRIST, Commissioner
(W«i£s««Sl>
RALEIGH
Mitchell Printing Company
State Printers
1926
DEPARTMENT PEKSOXXEL, 1925-1926
Fkank D. Geist, Commissioner Caldwell County
Miss Minnie Stamps Gosney, Secretary Wake County
William F. George, Assistant Commissioner Cumberland County
Pabks G. Hampton, Bookkeeper and stockman Yadkin County
Elizabeth Gbeek, Senior Clerk Caldwell County
Jerome C. Gobner, Warehouseman Granville County
Employment Service
Frank D. Grist, Federal Director Caldwell County
Clarence Beddingfield, Assistant Federal Director Wake County
Miss Kathebine Hamilton, Chief Clei-k Lee County
L. R. Hones, 8upt., Asheville Employment Office Buncombe County
Joseph M. Pratt, Supt., WiMston-Salevi Employment Office Forsyth County
Geo. a. Younce, Supt., Greetishoro Employment Office Guilford County
J. H. Cutheell, Supt.. Rocky Mount Employment Office Nash County
Bellamy Harris, Supt., Wilmington Employment Office..'New Hanover County
Bureau for the Deaf
Hugh G. Miller, Chief Cleveland County
Division of Service to World Wai- Veterans
F. A. Hutchison, State Service Officer Guilford County
11
LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
To His Excellency, A. W. McLean,
Governor of North Carolina.
Sib:—Pursuant to Section 7311, Consolidated Statutes, 1919, I here-with
transmit the Thirty-Fifth report of the Department of Labor and
Printing, covering the biennial period 1925-1926.
I present in statistical form information in regard to the industries
of the State. From these figures one can get a conception of the won-derful
progress that North Carolina has made during the biennial period
and it is regretted that limited space and funds prevent going into
greater detail in showing this progress. I feel that our industrial
growth has, to a great measure, been due to the labor conditions that
prevail throughout the Staite.
From observation and information received as Commissioner of Labor
and Printing, I am of the opinion that North Carolina is in the
fortunate condition of having as near ideal relations existing between
what is commonly called "capital and labor" as any State in the Union.
The industrial plants and industrial communities of North Carolina
are fast developing the "community spirit." Every industrial plant, of
any size, now furnishes for its employees, community houses, swimming
pools, playgrounds and various other forms of recreation and amuse-ments.
Instructions are given by doctors and other trained professional
men and women, to employees of the various plants, on health and liv-ing
conditions. Interest is shown in the public schools adjacent to and
in connection with the various industrial plants, by the owners and
managers.
In return for the many conveniences and recreations that are fur-nished
the working man and his family, the employees have developed
an appreciation of the conditions and there has arisen a spirit of
cooperation that has very nearly eliminated industrial strife in North
Carolina. A few minor industrial disruptions have been noted, in
North Carolina, during the past two years and without legal authority,
W I have made a quiet investigation into the cause of these few industrial
''f* iii
-3
North Caeolina Industrial Statistics
disturbances that have existed and it is my belief that ninety-five per
cent of the unrest that has developed has been caused by agitators that
have come in from sections beyond the borders of North Carolina.
No legislation could forestall the coming of these agitators and the
only way to counteract their influence is for the employer and employees
to continue to develop the spirit of harmony and fellowship each work-ing
for the best interest of the other, striving to improve the quantity
and quality of production and living conditions.
The public schools, good roads and other public improvements have
all been most effective in establishing the friendly relations that now
exist between the manufacturer and the working man. With the con-tinued
progress of the State, the education of the working class and the
cooperation of employer and employee, industrial strife in North Caro-lina
Avill be completely eliminated in a short time.
Also as required by law, I herein make such recommendations as in
my opinion would serve to the best interest of the public and would in-crease
the efficiency of this department.
WORJvMEN^S compensation ACT
North Carolina in the past two decades has made such rapid progress
as an industrial State that it has come to be recognized throughout the
nation and the world as being one of the greatest industrial sections of
the universe. Scarcely is there a single article produced, by man or ma-chinery,
that is not being produced in North Carolina. With a popu-lation
of over two and one half millions, a large percent are now en-gaged
in industrial work of some kind. Yearly the number of indus-trial
workers increase but the State has failed, thus far, to provide ade-quate
laws for the protection of this large percent of her population that
is engaged in hazardous work. This is at variance with the progress
that the State has made in other lines and is not consistent with the
business standards of the State.
Out of the forty-eight states of the Union there are now only six that
do not have some form of the principle of the workman's compensation,
and it is a source of regret that North Carolina is one of these states
-^
Letter of Transmittal
along with Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, Missouri and South Caro-lina.
The fact that this form of settlement of accidents in industry has
proven to be highly successful in forty-two states of the Union and in
practically every foreign country of the world speaks for itself and I
earnestly urge the enactment of a just workman's compensation law by
the General Assembly of 1927.
MINING
For the calendar year 1925 there was produced in the State of N'orth
Carolina approximately fifteen millions of dollars in mineral and other
products of the mines. The law provides inspection of these mines by
the Commissioner of Labor and Printing and I consider that this duty
is one that should be performed by a technical expert or a competent
mine engineer with at least five years' experience in underground mine
operations.
"We have operating in ll^orth Carolina, at the present time, two bitu-minous
coal mines and many smaller mines producing iron ore, feld-spar,
etc. There is a total of twenty-four minerals found in the State
and these various minerals are found in forty-four different counties.
While some of these mines are not in operation during the entire year
I regard it as very essential that these mines should be inspected.
Both of the coal mines in ISTorth Carolina have had explosions during
the past two years. The Carolina Coal Company Mine, at Sanford, E.
F. D. exploded on May 27th, 1925, and resulted in the death of fifty-three
men and the injury of two. The explosion of the Erskin-Eam-say
Coal Company, at Cumnock, IST. C, was on November 24th, 1926,
and resulted in the death of two men and the injury of two. The latter
explosion was slight but the former at the Carolina Coal Company Mine
resulted in the death of every man under ground and completely wrecked
the mine for several weeks.
I do not undertake to argue that proper and adequate mine inspection
would have prevented these two explosions but it would have given this
department an opportunity to have had greater knowledge of the condi-tions
of these mines if proper periodical inspection had been made by
a competent and efficient mine inspector. Also the State of North
vi !N'oKTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Carolina could have presented the mining industry in this State with
a clearer conscience i£ everything in its power had been done to safe-guard
the workmen in the mines.
There are dangers to both life and property in all of the mines and
quarries operating in JSTorth Carolina. Too often a disaster can be
caused by defective machinery or falling parts of rocks or other mate-rial
striking a workman. There is an inadequate practice of safety and
precaution in the mining industry. Therefore, I earnestly recommend
the enactment of legislation for the creation of a competent mine in-spector
in the Department of Labor and Printing.
Respectfully submitted,
F. D. Grist,
Commissioner.
Raleigh, lii. C, December 15, 1926.
CONTENTS
Chapter I
Cotton, "Woolen, Silk and Cokdage Mills
II
—
Knitting Mills
III
Furniture Factories
IV
Tobacco Manufactures
V
Miscellaneous Industries
VI
Mines and Mining
VII
The Power Situation in N'orth Carolina.
VIII
Farm akd Farm Labor
IX
Public Employment Service
Bureau of Labor for the Deaf
X
^Division of Service to World War Veterans
XI l^EWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS
XII
State Printing
Appendix—Classification of Industries
Vll
ABUNDANT AMERICAN LABOR SOUTH'S GREAT ASSET
STAUNCH, INTELLIGENT AND SKILLED CHARACTER OF THE CON-TENTED
AND PROSPEROUS ANGLO-SAXON MILL OPERATIVES
OF THE SOUTH IMPORTANT FACTOR IN RAPID EXPANSION
OF SOUTHERN TEXTILE INDUSTRY
By Wade H. Harris, Editor, Charlotte Observer.
The following article appeared iii the Manufacturers Record under date
of October 28, 1926, and is reprinted here by courtesy of the Manufac-turers
Record, Baltimore, Md.
Northern and New England Textile men continue coming South to invest
their capital. These mill men bring their money, but they do not bring their
labor. In fact, the impelling motive is to get away from that labor and to
leave it behind, for it is the established superiority of Southern mill help that
develops one of the South's most potent advantages in the field of industry.
The climate, as a matter of course, is a great asset, for the mechanical
humidifier is of but small necessity ; nearness to the raw supply is another
factor ; healthier living and cheaper living is yet another, but the staunch,
intelligent and skilled character of Southern Anglo-Saxon mill help is the
factor that makes the strongest appeal to the average outsider looking for
investment in the South.
Back of all these advantages of proximity to the cotton fields, of abun-dance
of native labor, of climate and of healthy and happy domestic conditions
is the paramount factor of cheap and abundant electric power. It was the
construction of transmission lines through all cotton sections of the South
that gave the textile industry its first great impetus and which is responsible
for the continuing multiplication of spindles and looms in the South. Devel-opment
of water-power resources is keeping just a little ahead of the devel-oping
demands by industry, and, like the supply of labor, the supply of
electrical energy iin the South seems to have no limit. Cheap electric power
will always play an important part in promotion of Southern industry.
Tlie Northern and New England men coming South likewise manifest a
preference for mill plants already built and in operation, as witness the
recent purchase by New York interests of such important manufacturing
plants as the Caroleen, the Henrietta and the Cherokee Falls. They have
not only saved the trouble of building and equipping mills, but come into
possession of factories already manned with competent labor, a class of labor
that aside from being intelligent and capable, is willing and endowed with
the very desirable qualifications of loyalty. The new investors show keenness
in seeking out the centers from which this native help is drawn. They find
good opportunities in the Piedmont districts of both North Carolina and South
Carolina, and investments have been particularly active in the vicinity of
Charlotte, Gastonia, Greenville and Spartanburg, while there has been a
distinct movement from the Piedmont farther into the heart of the native V
NoRTTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
labor, an indication of wliich is found in the drift toward Hendersonville,
Swannanoa, Black Mountain and Asheville sections, where new mills have
been built and purchased mills added to.
The textile industry is gaining impetus in the mountain districts and
largely by reason of the abundance of native labor available. There is no
exhaustion of this supply, for the Piedmont and mountain sections are pop-ulated
with the families of the Rooseveltian characteristics. The prospects
is that no matter to what extent the industrial South is developed, there
need be no fear on the score of exhaustion of native labor to man the fac-tories.
One factor in reliability of this labor supply is that industrial life in the
South is happy and contented, healthy and prosperous, the conditions under
which Southern labor lives being quite the opposite of tenement life in the
North and East. It is out of doors for the Southern mill worker. The mill
towns are model villages, except in the few isolated particulars, where old-estabUshed
mill settlements have not been renovated. But every mill village
built and populated in recent years is a village laid out after what might
be accepted as modern city planning. Paved streets are the first consider-ation
; water-works and sewerage come next. Then there is the flower garden
in front and the vegetable garden behind the home and the garage alongside.
Inside there are rugs and carpets, radios, pianolas, telephones, electric lights,
bath rooms, and, in fact, "all the conveniences of the city home." There are
schoolhouses of modern type—in architecture some of the cotton-mill school-houses
are a little ahead in architecture and equipment of the city buildings
—they have churches, hospitals, gymnasiums, playgrounds, trained nurses
and doctors, the latter provided by the mill owners. In short, the cotton-mill
operatives in the South live amidst the best surroundings that medical science
can devise and in all the comforts that money can provide, for it is the human
element that dominates the Southern textile industry, and which is the
promotive concern of the mill owners themselves, largely organized under
the name of the American Cotton Manufacturers Association. For this
organization Stuart W. Cramer is a representative spokesman, and we can
do no better than draw on his picture of life as lived in the Southern mill
community.
The mill village, he explained in an address before a meeting of the
association last year, is generally located outside the corporate limits of any
municipality and often in the country, therefore self-contained and self-supporting,
with its own store buildings, schools, churches and public utilities,
with its dwellings clustered around the mill buildings and all owned by the
mill company as a whole or in large part. The schools are under the direction
of the county boards of education ; wages are paid weekly in cash ; the stores
are generally owned and conducted by outsiders ; the churches are directed
by the regular church organizations, and the community activities are more
and more those of the people themselves, with a small negro population living
in the outskirts or in some segregated district.
And here comes in an important feature bearing on the relative wage
scale in New England and the South. In these mill villages we have described
Abundant American Labob South's Great Asset
the average charge, as Mr. Cramer says, is 25 cents a room per week. This
includes electric lights, water and sewerage, and is not even enough to keep
the houses painted and in repair, and that small amount is more than offset
by village and welfare expense, so that it is really not only a totally unpro-ductive
investment but a losing one. It has been demonstrated that this free-rent
equivalent and general village and welfare expense amounts to $4.36 per
operative per week, which is another way of saying that the Southern mill
operative enjoys an advantage of $4.36 per week over the representative
Northern mill operative, who usually lives in a city and has to pay out of
his wages an amount equal to that sum for the things his Southern brother
gets free. Now, that statement brings on more talk, for it is really not a
gift; on the contrary, one of the topics under very serious consideration by
the American Cotton Manufacturers Association is how best to handle that
matter, which is, after all, but a bookkeeping transaction, that the employes
will not only realize that it is a real item in their compensation, that it is
really a part of their pay, and also that the public generally may realize that
Southern cotton-mill workers are not so poorly paid as appears on the surface.
All this is recognized by the National Industrial Conference Board, which
now appends to its regular published wage comparisons the following foot-note
"The wage data given are for cash payments only and do not take into
consideration the value of such wage equivalents as reduced or free house
rent or other special services rendered by the companies to employes. Various
forms of wage equivalents are in use in industrial establishments in many
localities, and they are almost universal in the Southern cotton-mill districts,
but the part which these play as compensation for work performed cannot be
taken into account in a study of this character."
We have mentioned the garage alongside the house, for the average
cotton-mill worker in the South does not have all his recreation at home. He
has an automobile for him'self and family, just as surely as he has a cow and
a few pigs. The automobile necessarily figiires in Southern mill community
life, for, and it is the observation of Mr. Cramer, that even the most casual
of visitors to a mill community in this section must be impressed with the
amazing number of automobiles of all "vintages" in sight. The auto plays
an important part in the life of the operatives, for, to resume Mr. Cramer's
narrative, the mills close down on Saturday forenoons at 11 o'clock and by
early afternoon large numbers of workers are out for the week-ends even as
their former envied society neighbors. The educational value of all this
commingling of people over large areas is incalculable and contributes greatly
to their health and contentment ; no longer can agitators mislead them, for it
is too easy to go, see and check up, and few employers can shirk their respon-sibilities,
for the most desirable workers easily find work and surroundings
to their liking. One curious fact well worth noting is the number of work-men
who come to their work in automobiles, particularly those who come
in from the contiguous country for miles around during slack seasons on
the farms, and often country produce is brought to market at the same
time. The effect of this influence on industry, both farming and manu-facturing
is obviously far-reaching and gives promise of being at least in
xii North Cakolina Industrial Statistics
part a solution of the housing and home problems. "It is noteworthy," Mr.
Cramer submits by way of side remark, "that this great result is being
achieved by industrialists along sound economic lines rather than by legisla-tion
invoked by academicians—the rankest and most insidiously dangerous
kind of paternalism."
If it might be charged that we are playing up the Southern mill men too
much in the light of benefactors—and they are that in fact—it might be
explained that back of all this consideration they give to the welfare of their
help is a patriotic interest in the child of today, which, as Mr. Cramer says,
is regarded as the hope of Southern industrialism of tomorrow. The sentiment
of the Southern cotton-mill owner i.s reflected in the statement that "the health,
training and opportunities we bring to the children of today will largely
determine whether they will care to be the mill workers of tomorrow." Any
Southern mill man, therefore, who fails to support child-welfare work and to
observe such child-labor restrictions as have survived the chaos of experimen-tation,
both legislative and industrial, whether compelled to do so by law
or not, "is a traitor to his industry and to his own selfish Interests."
Back of the Anglo-Saxon mill help of the South stands a yet more
important factor, one who is accustomed to get much more of misplaced blame
than of well-deserved praise. It is the Anglo-Saxon mill man, and this is his
picture : "The average Southern mill man usually starts small, often has
come up from the ranks, succeeds in a small way and gradually works up to
an income that provides the usual necessities and luxuries of life ; his success
from that point on means only more income to be reinvested by enlargiing his
plant, added responsibilities and worries and no more necessities nor luxuries."
Here, then, comes in the cardinal principle of the Southern mill man : He sees
that he can best add to his own happinass and peace with the world "by
investing more and more of his own excess income in the health and happiness
of his fellow-men," this fellowship being constituted of the i)eople who daily
surround him as helpers and associates, and who draw his weekly payroll.
Such are the outstanding characteristics of the Southern cotton-mill work-ers,
the Southern cotton-mill owners and the domestic environments of life
in the Southern cotton-mill community.
CHAPTER I
COTTON MILLS
North Carolina leads the nation as the greatest cotton goods manu-facturing
State. There has been a substantial and permanent growth
in the industry during the past ten years but it is only during the last
two years that the State has taken first place in the manufacturing of
textile goods. The leading products of the mills are denims, canton
flannels, flannelettes, towels and toweling, cotton table damask, sheets
and sheetings, pillow cases, commercial yarns and ginghams.
The growth in the textile industry during the past ten years has been
very rapid but during the past two years, when the industry seemed to
be more on a decline in other states, North Carolina has gone forward
in a rapid manner. Statistics show that the State now has 6,075,168
spindles in place which is 156,630 more than were employed in 1924.
The number of active spindle hours for 1926 were 19,952,947,406 while
in 1924 they were 17,332,650,667. The actual number of spindles placed
in the mills of Massachusetts exceed those of North Carolina by a little
over five million being 11,417,406 but the number of spindle hours were
only 17,938,121,787. This gives to North Carolina 1,014,825,619 more
active spindle hours than any other one State.
Some of the mills have been consolidated and a few of them have
ceased to operate during the past two years but new ones have been
established and the total number of mills in the State today is larger
than it was at the close of the last biennial period. North Carolina
with four hundred and six mills has more active mills than any other
State. Table number one shoAvs a list of the mills by counties, Gaston
County, with 1,116,760 spindles and eighty-eight mills leads the State
as the greatest textile county. Of the seventy-three counties in the
United States that employ over 100,000 spindles twenty-one of these
counties are in North Carolina. It is to be regretted that some of the
mills failed to report certain items but of the four hundred and six
mills that are now in this State three hundred and forty reported a
capital stock of $196,515,585.
North Carolina Industrial Statistics
The number of looms used in the industry is 102,529 and the num-ber
of cards 16,336. During the year 1916 there were only 62,918 looms
and 9,806 cards showing an increase during the period of ten years of
62% in the looms and 66% in the use of cards. There are 641,100,442
pounds of raw material used annually in the mills of the State. Three
hundred and forty-five of the mills report the estimated value of the
yearly output to be $303,799,410.
There are now 49,792 men working in the mills, 30,582 women and
3,144 children. The first two figures indicate an increase during the
biennial period while the latter shows a decrease. The children em-ployed
in the mills are between the ages of fourteen and sixteen years
of age. The average high wage paid males is now $5.71 and the low
average is $2.12, these figures show an increase. The high average wage
paid females is $3.08 and the low average is $1.88 the former being a
decrease and the latter an increase. In 1924 at the close of the biennial
period, the average maximum wage for the males was $5.20 and the low
average was $2.00; for the females the high average was $3.25 and the
low average was $1.30. In 1916 the average high wages for the males
was $3.05 and the low average was 97c, while the high average for the
females was $1.50 and the low average was 85c.
The mills of Worth Carolina are owned, for the most part, by North
Carolinians and are operated, to a large extent by native labor. Suf-ficient
labor is generally to be found within the State and is available
to the extent needed. The ideal climatic conditions of the State, the
splendid water power and the nearest to the source of supply of raw
material all combine to make this the leading textile State. The aver-age
working day is ten hours and the majority of the mills run full
time, some operating both night and day. During the last few months
operations have been on a more reduced basis and in some instances
running time has been reduced to four and five days a week but the
feeling is optimistic and a material improvement is expected during
the coming months when price at which the new cotton may be pur-chased
is determined.
Cotton Mllls
The mills reporting on the amount of horse power used show a total
of 69,657 units. Two hundred eighty-three mills use electric power,
twenty-nine use steam and electric; twenty-one use steam; fourteen use
steam and water ; fifteen use electric and water ; seven use steam ; water
and electric; sixteen use water, three report the use of hydro-electric
power and three use oil to generate their power. Fifteen of the mills
failed to report on this particular item.
Statistical data relating to various details of the industry will be
found in the tabulations following:
ISToKTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
C5
»—coCOoy—D—oHcDo-ofcCnl»-*oco^—looO-'f^ cofM'-'Oor-cococo-H-^cs
0o0»tc^-»HOC'^MiCc0o'oMuo^oCrO^Co^oOciOC'T—> MCOOO-*—'lOCO^i—
— 'Tf -r (M —
s
o t
s
to
t-^rX<5M0'^*-c*O-(-r-i!ar:oocc^ojctoocco^(oNo CSOOO — -J^ — tCCriOJOOtC
^osoooS^co':o^oiS
^ ^' ^ cq ^
O!
CO
U5
r^(M»r505'*0»OCOrt<M<'rJ< Oi(NCO»005-HOi»C»0'<t<(M
CO CO l^ O C^l CO oo t^ O Oi w
cOo0oio»i0o0^0c<i:cM^OrC^0i»oO-O^IoMo^i Ot'-OiiC'—'lOCO-—'—<'-H
^ -rt- TJ- M ^
o
ire
c—otootrrooG^co-^-^oo-** CO '-O iC ti; ^ to -H iO iM *-H
3
C
O
CXS-f'^'Mu^iCCiM'COCOiO
'c
i
TO
C"OO'c-oOcOoOctsOoOiCvOqoCaOiOrO^OoOiOMOcOoO »ocsjioeooai>ior^TfT-.iO
3
3
e
O00C000C0G0»f3COCOC0»O
OOC-lOciitMUO'*'-''-'^
ei
s
CO
COOOO-^3SOC^1C^)<MOOCD
ti^OOOOOOOOCtO^CcO;OrO-OCOO'"-Oa^:^cI^-o^
•a
'c
C^ C-l O CTi O CO r^ -M oo CO »o
cC^iIrC:^rIriOr^- CoOCCOO'c^i^^t--^':o-oH C5
J3
a—
p.
E
o
Ci
CO
oo
C'TOtO^OCCOOTHCLOOcCOSOlOOCiOOO'O^-^'O^OCTOf
^lOoio(corioCc0oOrC^-00c0o0i0^r«3^<o3cUf0t aiU0^CDCO«3'*^^rt
^" W? UO W r^
E
o
a>
o
o
CO
<ocooo(Mao-^c^oooooocs
(MOO^COC;3I:-OOMr-OC2
r-OCNr^COIr^'rt'i—i(M-H
^' lO ic -m' —
fc
C5
CO
CO
('M*re-OcTOfcOO0l0^'-*^C-^*O<lMOCiDT0j0iCc^D ^0fr3'-'coc0':j'^»oi--r^
iCC5O0i0c(oMo»oo-cror'^^''Cr^o'oMc-o-o'oi
^' lO iC C>{ —
CD
CO tDOOOO'^'^OeOOO'^00 OTtPC^CC'OIiCOiCO^C'O—i'O(OOOCOOCO^'COOCOMS
^r^io^r-i-HOt^cociO
^' CD to" M '-T
! c3 n3 ; ; ; 1 1 ;
: I
^ £ "o ! i 1 ; .J I ; 1
1 ^ O .3 ^d 1 -t i g 1
Cotton Mills
COTTON SPINDLE HOURS IN NORTH CAROLINA AS COMPARED WITH OTHER
COTTON MANUFACTURING STATES
(From statistics compiled by the United States Bureau of the Census)
1925-1926 1924-1925 1923-1924 1922-1923 1921-1922
North Carolina
Alabama...
19,952,947,406
4,785,353,212
2,441,473,291
9,315,107,275
2,139,527,649
18,938,121,787
2,572,495,341
957,155,975
1,920,849,537
309,590,029
5,217,301,431
18,826,171,662
1,662,560,879
791,595,476
1,770,597,532
2,340,232,279
19,606,791,926
4,310,503,544
2,530,223,753
8,953,643,720
2,176,234,432
18,666,085,567
2,308,269,862
1,080,315,700
1,907,877,530
314,272,931
5,254,543,995
18,007,339,810
1,365,884,854
649,519,775
1,674,266,691
2,248,811,225
17,332,650,667
3,967,554,144
2,656,603,557
7,898,098,472
2,164,007,723
17,762,675,018
1,890,176,304
898,994,671
1,842,155,603
317,883,166
5,377,943,296
16,605,845,707
1,322,133,639
527,141,951
1,570,753,232
2,225,076,897
19,062,834,757
4,245,104,857
3,393,233,317
9,318,238,709
2,829,545,069
25,233,380,970
2,451,775,339
969,132,896
2,826,919,829
373,541,443
698,333,666
17,905,451,588
1,353,979,885
557,258,693
1,739,555,652
2,685,814,778
16,423,892,613
3,696,990,727
3,108,875,676
Georgia 7,373,764,606
Maine 2,630,834,727
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
23,102,738,622
1,865,087,663
889,519,940
New York 2,694,140,937
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
381,062,659
5,698,595,899
15,645,758,946
1,215,553,617
Texas 469,187,890
1,645,769,955
All other States 2,466,839,499
North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1
—
Mills iy Counties, Showing Executive Officers,
County Postoffice Mill President
Alamance-
_...do
.___do
....do
.-..do_
...do.
...do.
...do.
...do.
...do.
_.do
._do
....do
....do
.--_do
....do
....do
_...do
....do
....do
_...do
Alexander..
....do
....do
__..do
__._do
Anson
....do
Bladen
Buncombe.
...-do
....do
....do
Burke
....do
....do
....do
....do
Cabarrus.
...-do
...-do
..-.do
..--do
...-do
..--do
.-.-do
...-do
Burlington...
...do .1
....do -.-
....do-
...do
...-do-
....do -
....do -.
Elon College.
....do ---
...do -..-
Glen Raven.
Graham 1.:..
...do
...do
.---do
...do
Haw River
..--do ---
Mebane.. -.
Swepsonville
Stony Point
Taylorsville .
...-do --.
....do
....do
Wadesboro.
.---do...
Bladenboro-
Asheville
....do
--.-do-
Swannanoa.-
Henry River-
-M«iden.-;j.^_
Morganton...
Valdese
....do --..
Concord
....do
-.--do
-.--do --.
----do --.
..-.do
..-.do ---
.---do .---
..--do
Aurora Cotton Mills
Burlington Mills, Inc
Elmira Cotton Mills Co
Glencoe Mills
E. M. Holt Plaid Mills, Inc.
King Cotton Mills Corp
The Lakeside Mills
Stevens Mfg. Co
Consolidated Textile Corp. (Hope-dale
Division)
Consolidated Textile Corp. (Ossi-pee
Division)
Holt, Gant & Holt Cot. Mfg. Co..
Glen Raven Cotton Mills
L. Banks Holt Mfg. Co.
Saxapahaw Cotton Mills
Sidney Cotton Mills
Travora Mfg. Co., No. 1
White-Williamson Co
Holt-Granite Puritan Mill.
Travora Mfg. Co., Plant No. 2-..
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 15
—
Virginia Cotton Mills
Watts Spinning Co --.
Liledoun .Mfg. Co.i..i....-.a-
Miller Mfg. Co
North State Cotton Mill Co
Taylorsville Cotton Mill Co -
Wade Mfg. Co.-.-
Wadesboro Cotton Mill Co
Bladenboro Cotton Mills
Asheville Cotton Mills-.- --.
French Broad Mill of Martel Mills,
Ino
Martel Mills, Inc
Beacon Mfg. Co
Henry River Mfg. Co
Blue Ridge Cotton Mill
Alpine Cotton Mills..-
Valdese Mfg. Co
Waldensian Weavers, Inc
Brown Mfg. Co -. ---
Cabarrus Cotton Millf --
Cannon Mfg. Co.f
Franklin Cotton Mills
Gibson Mfg. Co
Hartsell Mills Co
Hobarton Mfg. Co -
Locke Cotton Mills Co
Norcott Mills Co
Eugene Holt, Mgr
M. B. Smith
E. C. Holt...
Mrs. W. G. Green
Lynn B. Williamson
Thomas F. Jefferson
E. C. Holt
Paul Stevens
A. S. Pierce, Jr
A. S. Pierce, Jr
Lynn B. Williamson
J. Q. Gant---
Lynn B. Williamson
F. L. Williamson
H. W. Scott
J. H. White-
F. L. Williamson
J. L. Williamson
J. H. White
C. McD. Carr
B. W. Baker --
A. L. Watts-
J. A. Miller, Jr.
J. A. Miller, Jr
R. A. Adams
J. C. Connelly
T. C. Coxe-
C. M. Burns-
R. L. Bridger
J. E. Hardin
G. E. Huggins
G. E. Huggins
Charles M. Boyd-- -..
M. L. Mauney
J. W. Abernethy.-
W. A. Erwin...
A. M. Kistler
B. S. Gaither....
C. W. Johnston
Jas. B. McEachern, Supt.
C. A. Cannon
Mrs. J. W. Cannon, Sr
A. R. Howard
W. W. Flowe.--- ---.
A. R. Howard
W. A. Erwin---
J. J. Haywood
*Began operating July, 1925. tBranch of Kannapolis.
Cotton Mills
Date of Establishment, Capital Stock, Selling Agent, Etc.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
Capital
Stock
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
Agent's Name
Spencer Love _
W. T. Cheatham....
H, L. Holt
Walter M. Williams.
R. M. Jeffress
J. H. Holt
R. W. BarnswelL
1885
1923
1885
1899
1883
1912
1893
1919
240,000
400, 000
210,000
112,000
40,000
312,000
78,000
40,000
agent,
direct,
agent,
agent,
agent.
direct
agent,
agent.
T. Holt Haywood Dept., New York City.
William Iselin & Co., New York City
William Iselin & Co., New York City
T. Holt Haywood Dept., New York City;
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City.
William Iselin & Co., New York City
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City.
T. B. Spencer, Mgr.
George H. Fowler...
Roger Gant
McBride Holt
L. A. Williamson
Don E. Scott
W. E. White
L. A. Williamson...
L. B. Wilhams
W. E. White
A. H. Carr
W. C. Kirkpatrick..
I. H. Miller
I. H. Miller
W. H. Carson...
I. H. Miller
J. M. Hardison.
W. B. Rose
C. O. Bridger..,
M. D. Long
R. L. Mitchell...-.
R. L. Mitchell
Charles D. Owen.
D. W. Aderholdt.,
J. E. Erwin...
F. Garrou
S. M. Sloan...
H. W. Moore.
1881
1902
1909
1849
1888
1901
1849
1916
1912
1922
1894
1922
1916
1916
1920
1908
1923
1890
1912
1911
1900
1924
1902
1918
1895
1914
1925
1905
150,000
1,000,000
180,000
40,000
70,000
180,000
1,500,000
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent.
1,000,000
555,450
250,000
300,000
300,000
125,000
750,000
120,800
800,000
250,000
5,000,000
400,000
83,000
300,000
390,200
350,000
both...
agent--
agent.-
agent..
agent.,
agent.,
direct.,
agent.,
direct. _
direct. _
agents.
agents,
agent.,
direct. _
agent..
Converse & Co., New York City
T. Holt Haywood, New York City
Harding, Tilton & Co., New York City
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City
Cone Export and Comm. Co., Greensboro, N. C.
Buchanan-Hicks Co., St. Louis, Mo..
T. Holt Haywood, New York City
Holt Haywood, New York City
Used in Travora, No. 1, Graham
J. B. Cameron, Philadelphia, Pa
Consolidated Selling Co., Inc., New York
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Taylorsville Cotton Mill Co., Philadelphia, Pa..
Taylorsville Cotton Mill Co., Philadelphia, Pa..
Acme Sales Co., Mason & Simmington
Taylorsville Cotton Mill Co., Philadelphia, Pa..
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City..
Cone Export Co., Greensboro and New York.
Farish Company, New York City.
Parish Company, New York City.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
agent-both_.
agent
agent.
Erwin Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
W. Y. Mulh._._
A. W. Baylis Co., New York City
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City
T. T. Smith
C. A. Cannon
G. C. Fisher
J. L. Hartsell
George C. Fisher..
Thomas H. Webb.
1887
1903
1900
1905
1923
1908
1915
10,500,000
975,000
1,127,200
125,000
150,000
1,250,000
343,800
agent.
agents,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent..
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
Cannon Mills, New York City
Cannon Mills, Inc , New York City
Cannon Mills, Inc. ; L. P. Muller & Co., Phila.,Pa.
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
Joshua L. Baily Co., New York City
K'oRTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Ta3le No. 1
—
County
Cabarrus..
...do
...do
...-do
....do
....do
.-..do
CaldwelL..
.-..do
....do
....do
.---do-
---.do
....do
.-.-do
.---do
.-..do
....do
----do
.---do
....do
Catawba..
....do-
....do
....do -
...-do
----do
.--.do
....do
.---do-
.---do
.-..do
....do
...-do
Chatham..
.-..do
.--.do
Chowan. --
Cleveland
...-do
..--do
..--do
.do-
.do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
_do-
PostofEce
Concord
....do
...do
Kannapolis
..-.do
Mount Pleasant-.
....do
Granite Falls
..--do
...-do
....do --
Lenoir.tl.-'ii.'"..
....do— -.:......
..--do
....do
.---d0->y.'j:iiiJ-.-
-.--do
do.i.ii..U f.---
Mortimer
Patterson.
Rhodhiss
Brookford ---
Hickory
.-.-do
.-.-do
Long Island -
Maiden-
.---do
.---do -
.-.-do
...-do-
Newton
.---do -
.---do
Pittsboro
....do-
Siler City -
EdentoR-- -.
Grover
Kings Mountain.
....do
....do
.do.
.do.
-do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
-do-
Mill
Renfrew Mfg. Co.f
Roberta Mfg. Co
White-Parks Mills Co
Cabarrus Cotton Mills--
Cannon Mfg. Co
Kindly Cotton Mills
Tuscarora Cotton Mill
Dudley Shoals Cotton Mill Co.
Falls Mfg. Co.---
Granite Falls Mfg. Co ---.
Southern Mfg. Co.--
Caldwell Cotton Mill Co
Hudson Cotton Mfg. Co
Lenoir Cotton Mills
Moore Cotton Mill Co.--
Nelson Cotton Mill Co.---
Steele Cotton Mill
Whitnel Cotton Mill Co
United Mills Co
Watts Cotton Mill
Rhodhiss Mills Co
Brookford Mills Co
Hickory Spinning Co -
Ivey Mill Co
A. A. Shuford Mill Co
Long Island Cotton Mills Co....
Blue Ridge Cotton Mill ..-
Carolina Cotton Mill.
James Cotton Mill, Inc., No. 2.
Liberty Spinning Co
Union Cotton Mills
Catawba Cotton Mills*
City Cotton Mills Co
Yount Cotton Mill
J. M. Odell Mfg. Co
Pompton-Lakes Weaving Co
Hadley-Peoples Mfg. Co..-
Edenton Cotton Mills
Minette Mills
Bonnie Cotton Mill
Cora Cotton Mills.-
Dilling Cotton .Mills -...
Kings Mountain Mfg. Co.
Margrace Mills
Mason Cotton Mills Co....
Park Yarn Mills Co
Patricia Mills, Inc
Pauline Mills, Inc
Pnenix .Mills Co
Sadie Cotton Mills Co
President
Donald M. Hill
C. W. Johnston
J. G. Parks
C. A. Cannon.
C. A. Cannon--
A. N. James
Charles A. Cannon..
J. D. Elliott
J. D. Elliott.
G. H. Geitner
J. D. Elliott
J. C. Seagle -.
J. C. Seagle
J. H. Beall
J. H. Beall.-.-
J. L. Nelson
R. L. Steele
G. F. Harper
G. N, Hutton
A. L. Watts.
R. C. Moore.-
C. A. Braman .-.
G. N. Hutton
G. H. Geitner
G. H. Geitner.. _
L. C. Wagner.-
J. W. Abernathy
W. B. Murray
J. A. Abernethy, Jr..
G. L. Whisnant
C. E. Hutchison
John P. Yount
S. J. Smyer
Partnership
J. A. Odell
A. C. Kluge
W. G. Sydnor
H. G. Wood...
C. F. Harry, Owner.
J. S. Mauney
O. G. Falls
A. G. Myers
W. O. Mauney.
W. E. Neisler
J. C. Mason
R. H. Johnston.
C. E. Neisler---
C. E. Neisler--..
F. A. Smith
L. A. Kiser.
*Same as last report. fBranch of parent company, .\dams, Mass.
Cotton Mills
Continued.
Secretary-
Allen M. Perkins_
W. W. Flowe
W. W. Flowe
E. Sauvain
T. T. Smith
C. A. Barringer.,.
A.. A. Cline
A. C. Cline
A. Alex. Shuford.
A. A. Cline
J. L. Nelson
J. L. Nelson
J. L. Nelson
J. L. Nelson
J. L. Nelson
T. H. Broyhill..__
J. L. Nelson
H. J. Holbrook__.
A. L. Watts
E. C. Marshall--.
J. B. Duval
H. J. Holbrook._.
A. Alex. Shuford-
A. Alex. Shuford-
Osborne Brown...
B. M. Spratt, Jr
J. A. Abernethy, Jr.
S. L. Heffner
C. W. Baucom
J. W. Yount..
R. B. Knox
A. H. London
J. C. Gregson.
W. O. Elliott..
W. A. Mauney...
O. G. Falls.
W. B. Simonson.
S. G. Mauney
P. M. Neisler
O. B. Carpenter
George E. Weber, Jr.
P. M. Neisler
P. M. Neisler
J. D. Smith
D. C. Mauney
1867
1915
1887
1925
1900
1906
1915
1922
1923
1904
1901
1908
1923
1918
1907
1920
1916
1920
1901
1917
1903
1909
1890
1916
1916
1923
1921
1893
1900
1920
1916
1888
1921
1895
1898
1920
1900
1900
1894
1920
1918
1919
1920
1910
1917
1919
Capital
Stock
$1,692,500
30,500
127,800
4,500,000
10,500,000
825,000
90,000
108,300
130,000
146,000
250,000
200,000
250,000
135,000
300,000
210,000
225,000
312,200
242,000
1,000,000
350,000
324,700
374,560
300,000
109,000
78,800
350,000
150,000
. 100,000
233,000
200,000
60,000
55,800
450,000
150,000
198,000
500,000
300,000
95,000
400,000
250,000
104,100
100,000
400,000
450,000
200,000
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
.A.gents?
agent-,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
both...
both...
both...
agents-both...
agent.
direct.,
agent.,
agent. _
agent.,
direct.,
agents,
agents,
agent..
agent-agent,
agent,
both..
Both.,
direct,
both-,
both-,
direct,
both.,
agent,
direct,
agent-agent
agent.
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent.
Agent's Name
F. U. Stearns & Co
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
Frankhn D'Oher & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Cannon Mills, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa
Various-
Stevens Yarn Co.
Catlin & Co., Inc., Boston, Mass
Ridley-Watts Co., New York City...
A. D. Juilliard Co., New York City_
Harding, Tilton & Co., New York City-
Various
Commission houses
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Stevens Yarn Co., New York City
Commercial housc-
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Wilson & Biadbury, New York City; Cotton
Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa
A. W. Baylis Co., New York City- :
L. P. Muller & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
A. W. Baylis Co., New York City
A. W. Baylis Co., New York City
Wilson & Bradbury, New York City
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa
10 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1
—
County
Cleveland-
...do
...do
...do
....do....
....do
...do
...do
...do
...do
Cumberland-
...do
...do
....do
...do
...do
...do
Davidson
...do
...do
...do
....do
....do -
....do...
Davie
Durham
....do --
....do
....do
..--do
....do
-...do- --
-...do
Edgecombe..
----do
Forsyth
...-do
Franlvlin
-...do..-
Gaston
..--do
-...do
....do
..--do
.-.-do
...-do
...-do -..
....do
....do
-...do
PostofiBce
Lawndale-
Shelby-...
...do
.--do.
--do
...do
...do..
--.do
...do
...do
Cumberland
Fayetteville
...do
...do
...do ----
.---do
Hope Mills
Lexington
....do -
...do
..--do
...-do- --..
Thomasville
.---do -
Cooleemee
Durham
.-..do -
.--.do....
..--do
.-..do-
East Durham..
West Durham.
----do
Tarboro
....do.
Winston-Salem.
.--.do.--
Franklinton
---.do
Belmont.--
-...do-
-.-.do
-...do
.--.do
-..-do
.---do
..-.do
...do-
.---do
---.do.
Mill
Cleveland Mill and Power Co
Belmont Cotton Mills Co
Cleveland Cloth Mills, Inc
Consolidated Textile Co. (Ella
Division)
Double Shoals Mfg. Co ...-
Dover Mill Co -
Eastside Mfg. Co
Lily Mill and Power Co
Ola Mills... -
Shelby Cotton Mills....
Corley Mills, Inc.*
Cotton Products Co
Holt-Williamson Mfg. Co
Holt-Granite Puritan Millsf
Tolar, Hart & Holt Mills
Victory Mfg. Co..
Rockfish Mills, Inc
Dacotah Cotton Mills, Inc
Erlanger Cotton Mill
Nokomis Cotton Mills
Wabena Mill, Inc
Wennonah Cotton Mills Co
Amazon Cotton Mills
Jewel Cotton Mills..
Erwin Cotton Mills Co., No. 3....
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 1
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 6
Golden Belt Mfg. Co
Pearl Cotton Mills...
Yarbrough Mills, Inc...
Durham Cotton Mfg. Co
Erwin Cotton Mills Co., No. I....
Erwin Cotton Mills Co., No. 4....
Fountain Cotton Mill
Hart Cotton Mills, Inc
Arista Mills Co
Inverness Mills Co..
Sterling Cotton Mills
Vann-Moore Mills Co.{-.
Acme Spinning Co
Belmont Fabric Co.§
Chronicle Mills
Climax Spinning Co. --
Crescent Spinning Co
Eagle Yarn Mills, Inc.-
Imperial Yarn Mills, Inc
Linford Mills, Inc -
Majestic Mfg. Co—
National Yarn Mill.-. Inc.--
Perfection Spinning Co
President
John F. Schenck, Sr.
J. H. McMurry
O. Max Gardner
F. K. Ruprecht
A. W. McMurry
J. R. Dover
J. R. Dover
J. F. Schenck, Sr....
J. R. Dover
Charles C. Blanton.
Clifton Corley
I. A. Lyon
E. H. Williamson...
F. L. Williamson
J. R. Tolar
Robert Lassiter
D. J. Rose
W. A. Hunt, Jr
M. S. Erlanger -
J. M. Gamewell
J. H. Thompson
W. E. Holt
C. G. Hill.-
R. L. Stowe
B. N. Duke
C. McD. Carr
C, McD. Carr
G. W. Hundley
W. A. Erwin..
E. S. Yarbrough
W. A. Erwin
B. N. Duke
B. N. Duke
W. A. Hart-..
W. A. Hart
A. H. Bahnson
M. P. Orr-
A. H. Vann
A H. ^'ann
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
W. B. Puett
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
A. C. Lineberger
•Same as last report. fldle. JStarted operations May 1, 1926. §New mill.
Cotton Mills 11
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
H. E. Schenck._
A. W. McMurry.
E. T. Sevitzer...
Sherboone Prescott.
H. R. Royster
F. R. Morgan
F. R. Morgan
J. W. Schenck
E. Q. Hamrick
R. T. LeGrand
J. C. Smith
W. M. Walker
A. A. McEachern_-
J. W. Tolar
A. E. Ritch
R. L. Huffines
W. H. MendenhalL
G. W. Mountcastle.
J. M. Gamewell
R. P. Earnhardt...
J. V. Moffitt
R. C. Rapp
W. L. Nicholson
W. A. Erwin
A. H. Carr
A. H. Carr.
C. A. Moore..
J. Harper Erwin...
S. F. Darneall
J. Harper Erwin...
W. A. Erwin
W. A. Erwin
R. C. Roberts
Harry Smith
N. B. Smith
George W. Orr
J. W. Daniel
L. H. Allison
R. B. Suggs
H. W. Ruyne
R. L.'Stowe
S. P. Stowe .
George W. Stowe..
J. W. Stowe
R. L. Stowe
J. E. Ford
S. P. Stowe
R. L. Stowe
D. P. Stowe
1903
1907
1925
1919
1919
1923
1918
1903
1925
1899
1899
1924
1899
1906
1916
1909
1914
1900
1923
1909
1910
1900
1898
1915
1899
1892
1925
1884
1892
1910
1898
1916
1903
1910
1925
1925
1918
1925
1901
1916
1919
1920
1907
1920
1907
1914
1919
Capital
Stock
100,000
60,000
225,000
100,000
700,000
674,000
135,000
475,000
450,000
450,000
21,000
200,000
414,000
5,000,000
600,000
600,000
190,000
61,500
525,000
178,300
,910,000
1,500,000
437,500
150,000
900,000
9,243,600
347, 600
1,000,000
487,800
164,600
700,000
500,000
600,000
1,000,000
250,000
900,000
600,000
800,000
400,000
700,000
400,000
606,000
700,000
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
agent,
agent,
agent.
agent,
agent,
agent.
both.,
agent,
both.,
agent,
direct,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent-agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
both.,
agent
both.,
both.,
direct,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
direct.
agent.,
agent..
Direct,
both...
both...
both...
direct.,
agent.
both...
direct.,
agent..
Agent's Name
James E. Reynolds Co., New York City.
Commission houses
The Parish Company, New York City...
Consolidated Selling Co., New York City.
Wilson & Bradbury, New York City
Wilson & Bradbury, Inc., New York City.
Stevens Yarn Co., Inc., New York City
Wilson & Bradbury, New York City
The Parish Company, New York City
The Parish Company, New York City
Buchanan-Hicks Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Tolar & Hart, New York City
Hunter Mfg. Co., New York City-
Export and Commerce Co
Langerre Sales Co., New York City.
Frederick Victor & Achelis, New York City.
Cannon Mills, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
Joshua L. Baily Co., New York City
J. B. Cameron, Philadelphia, Pa '
J. B. Cameron, Philadelphia, Pa
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City
Tatum, Pmkham & Grey, New York City.
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City.-..
Leslie Evans & Co., New York City
Leslie Evans & Co., New York City
T. Holt Haywood Dept., New York City-
Woodward-Baldwin Co., New York City.-.
Cotton Products Co., New York City
Stockton Commission Co., New York City.
Various agents.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Various agents
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
12 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1-
County
Gaston-
...do—
...do—
...do...
...do...
...do...
...do.._
...do...
...do...
...do...
....do...
...do...
...do...
....do...
..-.do...
...-do...
.do.
.do
.do
.do
-do
..do
.do
-do
-do
..do
..do
..do
..do
.-do -
..do
--do
--do
--do
..do
..do
..do
..do
..do
..do
..do
..do
..do
__do
..do
..do
__do
__do
..do
Postoffice
Belmont
....do
Bessemer City-
Bessemer City
-...do
-...do
....do
....do
Cherryville
....do!
-...do
....do
....do ----
....do
Cramerton —.do.-...
-do.
Dallas
Gastonia
-..do
---do
...do ---.
...do
---do
---do
...do
...do
...do
...do
.---do
.---do
...-do
.-..do
.-..do
.-..do
.--.do
..--do
do.lie-_VLft4.
..--do.^J^.ifeJ.
-...do
--.-do
---.do
....do
-do.
-do.
.do.
.do.
-do.
-do.
Mill
Sterling Spinning Co
Stowe Spinning Co
American Cot. Mills, Inc., No. 1..
American Cotton Mill, No. 2
Gambrill & Melville Co
George Cotton Mill --
Osage Mfg. Co.--- -
Southern Cotton Industries*
Carlton Yarn Mills, fnc
Cherryville Mfg. Co.--
Gaston Mfg, Co --- --
Howell Mfg. Co -- --
Rhync-Houser Mfg. Co
Wildan Mfg. Co.---
Cramerton Mills, Inc
Mayflower Mill (branch Cramer-ton
Mills).-- ---- --
Mays Mill (branch Cramerton
Mills)-.-
Dorothy Mfg. Co., Inc
Arkray Mills, Inc --- -.
Arlington Cotton Mills -.
Armstrong Cotton Mills Co
Avon Mills, Inc
Art Cloth Mfg. Co
The Avon Mills
Buffalo Mills, Inc
Clara Mfg. Co -
Dixie Mills, Inc
Dunn Mfg. Co
Flint Mfg. Co. - -
Gastonia Weaving Co
Gray Mfg, Co
Groves Mills, Inc
Hanover Thread Mill, Inc --.
Harden Mfg. Co -.. -
Lorny Mills-..
Manville-Jenckes Co. (Lorny Mill)
Modena Cotton Mills
Monarch Cotton Mills Co
Morowebb Cotton Mills Co.-
Mountain View Mill, Inc
Mutual Cotton Mills Co
Myers Mills, Inc
Myrtle Mills, Inc
Osceola Mills, Inc
Ozark Mills
Parkdale Mills, Inc.-
Piedmont Spinning Mills ---
Pinkney Mills, Inc.-
Priscilla Spinning Co
President
R. L. Stowe
S. P. Stowe
H. Goldberg
H. Goldberg-
F. C. Pinkham-
J. F. Thornburg, Supt.
R. B. Pitts
L. L. Self
D. E. Rhyne-
,1. H. Hull -..
D. E. Rhyne-
D. E. Rhyne
D. E. Rhyne
Stuart W. Cramer.
John C. Rankin
J. Lee Robinson
L. L. Jenkins
C. C. Armstrong
J. Lee Robinson
B. E. Geer-
John C. Rankin
B. H. Parker-- -
C. C. Armstrong- -
J. K. Dixon
C. C. Armstrong
L. L. Jenkins.
Julius M. Reis
L. L. Jenkins-
H. H. Groves--
W. T. Rankin
VV. T. Love..
H. F. Lippitt
F. L. Jenckes
John C. Rankin
C. C. Armstrong... —
F. H. Robinson
H. S. Mackie-
C. C. Armstrong...
A. G. Myers
J. L. Gray.- --
W. T. Rankin, Pr. and Treas.
Frost Torrence
J. Lee Robinson
C. C. Armstrong
R. G. Rankin
\V. E. Love- -...
Idle.
Cotton Mills 13
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
Capital
Stock
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
Agent's Name No.
S. P. Stowe
R. L. Stowe
R. Goldberg..-.
R. Goldberg....
E. B. Ambrose.
A. Scott Dyer.
1919
1920
1919
1925
1907
1919
1909
630,000
250,000
100,000
200,000
125,000
350,000
direct-direct,
agent,
agent-agent,
agent,
agent.
Poncet-Davis Co., Akron, Ohio
Poncet-Davis Co., Akron, Ohio
Tatum, Pinkham & Grey, New York City.
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Reeves Brothers, Inc., New York City
C. A. RudisilL.
W. B. Rhyne...
D. P. McClurd.
W. B. Rhyne...
H. H. Huss
W. B. Rhyne...
H. L. Moore
1922
1890
1896
1907
1920
1925
1907
265,000
200,000
250,000
230,000
293,400
200,000
3,000,000
agent.,
agent-,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agents.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Schell, Longstreth & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
J. E. Mitchell Co.; Galey & Lord.
Coit M. Robinson...
J. H. Separk
J. H. Separk
A. K. Winget
J. H. Separk
A. C. Lineberger, Jr.
S. M. Robinson, Tr..
B. H. Parker
A. K. Winget
A. M. Dixon
A. K. Winget
J. H. Separk
Ben Reis.
J. H. Separk.
M. O. Thornburg
George E. Marvin...
G. A. Robinson
F. T. Jenckes
C. H. Merriman
W. T. Love, Treas...
A. K. Winget
C. A. Rudisill
George E. Marvin...
A. K. Winget
J. L. Bush
J. H. Separk
George E. Marvin...
C. K. Torrence
J. H. Separk
A. K. Winget
L. S. Rankin _
S. A. Robinson
1912
1923
1900
1910
1918
1932
1896
1921
1907
1920
1908
1907
1925
1905
1916
1917
1889
1900
1900
1893
1907
1903
1918
1916
1919
1918
1916
1899
1916
1907
1916
1919
75,000
663,900
700,000
230,000
300,000
1.500,000
200,000
62,000
4,000.000
300,000
300,000
1,220,000
10,000
700,000
500,000
130,000
75,000
180,000
425,000
100,000
148.000
160,000
500,000
600,000
200,000
200,000
500,000
125,000
475,000
1,000,000
agent.,
direct,
direct,
agent.,
direct,
agent,
agent.,
both.,
agent.,
agent,
agent,
direct,
direct-direct-direct-direct.
direct,
direct,
direct,
direct,
agent,
both.-
direct-agent-agent-direct-direct-direct.
direct,
agent,
both.,
agent.
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa..
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa...
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Carolina Yarn Corp., Philadelphia, Pa
H. A. James, New York City
14 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1
—
County
Gaston.
...do...
_.-do...
.._.do_..
...do...
...do...
...do...
.---do...
...do.-.
...do...
...do...
..-.do...
.--.do...
...do...
...do...
..--do-..
...do—
...do...
...do...
..--do
..--do
....do
....do
.---do
.-..do
....do
....do
...-do
Granvillc-i^
uilford.-
....do
.---do
.---do
....do
...do.
...do.
.--do.
.--do-
---do-
.--dO-Halifax
---do
----do-
----do-
Harnett
--.-do
Henderson,
--.-do
Hoke
Pcstoffipe
Gastonia
..-.do
...do
...do
...do
.--.do
.-..do...
...do
...do
---do -.-
...do
...do -.-.
High Shoals-
.---do .--.
Lowell.--
...do --..
McAdenville.
Mount Holly
...do
...do
...do ---
..--do
...do-
StanleyJ«i./<-i>:c--f-f J
...do.Aii.b'r-L-^:
...do.— -A
-..do
Oxford ....
Burlington
Gibsonville .--
Greensboro - -
---do
---do
...do
...do
High Point.
...do
---do
Jamestown-
Roanoke Rapids.
....do -
Rosemary
Weldon
Erwin
...do -.
Balfour
Tuxedo
Raeford
Mill
Ragan Spinning Co...
Rankin Mills
Ranlo Mfg. Co
Rex Spinning Co
Ridge Mills, Inc
Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc
Seminole Cotton Mills Co
A. M. Smyre Mfg. Co -..-,
Spencer Mountain Mills
Trenton Cotton Mills
Victory Yarn Mills Co
Winget Yarn Mills Co...
High Shoals Mills
Manville-Jenckes, Inc
Lowell Cotton Mills
Peerless Mfg. Co
McAden Mills
Adrian Mfg. Co.*..
Alsace Mfg. Co.*
American Yarn and Processing Co.
Madera Spinning Mills*
Tuckasegee Spinning Co..
Woodlawn Mfg. Co.*
Alba Mfg. Co ---
Catawba Spinning Co -
Globe Yarn Mills- .-.-
Lola Gingham Millsf -
Lola Mfg. Co
Oxford Cotton Mills.
Gem Cotton Mills
Minneola Mfg. Co
Pomona Mills
Proximity Mfg. Co
Revolution Cotton Mills
Southern Webbing Mills, Inc.
White Oak Cotton Millst
Highland Cotton Mills
Millis Cotton Mills..
Pickett Cotton Mills, Inc
Oakdale Cotton Mills
Roanoke Mills Co
Rosemary Mfg. Co
Patterson Mills Co., Inc
Audrey Spinning Mills
The Erwin Cotton Mills Co.
The Erwin Cotton Mills Co.,
Balfour Mills, Inc
Green River Mfg. Co
Raeford Cotton Mills Co
President
George W. Ragan.
Henry Rankin
J. C. Rankin
J. H. Mayes
R. G. Rankin
E. L. P. Adams...
C. C. Armstrong..
J. L. Robinson
J. C. Rankin
J. K. Dixon.
C. C. Armstrong-.
C. C. Armstrong..
H. F. Lippitt
H. F. Lippitt
J. C. Rankin
J. C. Rankin
H. M. McAden....
C. G. Hutchison.
A. Q. Kale.
J. C. Rankin
J. C. Rankin
J. C. Rankin.
J. C. Rankin
J. C. Rankin
W. A. Erwin
Eugene Holt, Mgr..
C. M. Gruggenheimer
J. E. Latham
Bernard M. Cone
Mrs. Bertha S. Stcrnberger,
T. S. Dalton...
Bernard M. Cone
J. H. Adams
H. A. Millis
F. M. Pickett
William G. Ragsdale..
W. S. Parker
S. F. Patterson
J. A. Moore
George C. Green
B. N. Duke..
B. N. Duke
Ellison A. Smyth
Frank W. Van Ness.
Claude Gore
•Branch American Yarn and Processing Co. fldle. JOwned by Proximity Manufacturing Co.
Cotton Mills 15
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
Capital
Stock
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
Agent's Name
Caldwell Ragan.
L. S. Rankin
W. T. Love
H. T. Godwin. _.
L. S. Rankin
T. L. Wilson
A. K. Winget
Fred Smyre
W. T. Love
A. M. Dixon
A. K. Winget
A. K. Winget
F. L. Jenckes
F. L. Jenckes
S. M. Robinson..
S. M. Robinson..
R. R. Ray
1923
1919
1917
1915
1920
1919
1916
1917
1891
1894
1919
1919
1900
1923
1900
1906
1882
5 300,000
250,000
400,000
1,000,000
550,000
150,000
500,000
500,000
100,000
280,800
800,000
475,000
850,000
300,000
400,000
direct,
agent-direct,
agent,
both.,
both.,
agent,
both.,
agent,
agent,
agent,
agent,
direct,
direct,
agent,
agent,
agent.
Carolina Yarn Corp., Philadelphia, Pa.
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Carolina Yarn Corp., Philadelphia, Pa...
Different agents
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Clarence Whitman & Son, New York City.
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Gastonia Cotton Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
L. P. Muller & Co. ; Cone Export and Comm. Co
J. M. Hatch...
T. W. McCree.
1920 2,039,100
500,000
direct,
1924 both..
R. F. Craig
R. F. Craig
R. F. Craig
R. F. Craig
R. A. Craig
R. H. Lewis, Jr.
J. R. Young...
C. W. Causey..
J. E. Harden..
S. Sternberger.
L. W. Joyce
J. O. Harden..
J. E. Millis.....
G. J. Johnson.
R. H. Walker..
O. M. Bundy..
J. M. Jackson...
E. W. Lehman...
A. L. Taylor
W. J. Aldridge...
W. A. Erwin
W. A. Erwin
J. Adger Smyth.
Carl H. Potter...
C. W. Seate
1920
1919
1920
1922
1918
1900
1905
1888
1904
1895
1899
1924
1905
1913
1923
1911
1865
1895
1900
1909
1923
1904
1925
1924
1908
1920
60,000
410,000
250,000
275,000
300,000
275,000
both.,
both.,
both.,
both.,
both.,
agent. Erwin Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
200,000
1,165,000
500,000
3,000,000
150,000
500,000
500,000
157,500
203,700
200,000
3,000,000
3,700,000
661,000
192,000
Agent,
agent,
agent,
agent.,
direct,
agent.,
direct,
direct,
agent.,
both...
Cone Export and Comm. Co.,
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co.,
Cone Export and Comm. Co.,
Cone Export and Comm. Co.
New York City
New York City..
New York City..
New York City..
Greensboro and
Cone Export and Comm. Co., New York City.
900,000
100,000
500,000
agent.,
agent.,
agents,
agents,
agent.
agents,
agent.,
direct.,
direct..
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York and Philadelphia
F. W. Winn & Son, Philadelphia, Pa.; William
T. Burnett & Co., Baltimore, Md
James L. Wilson & Co., Phila. and New York..
James L. Wilson & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City..
Reeves Brothers, New York City
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City.
Woodward, Baldwin & Co., New York City
Carl H. Potter, Tuxedo, N. C
16 North Carouna Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1—
County
Iredell --
...do
...do
...do
...do..-
...do
...do
Johnston
...do
...do ----
...do
...do
...do -
Lee
Lenoir
...do
Lincoln
...do
...do
....do
...do
...do...
.___do
....do
....do
....do
._.-do
..__do
..-.do
....do
....do
McDowell
...-do
..--do
Madison
Mecklenburg.
....do..-
....do
...-do-
.---do.--
-.--do
----do
--.-do
-do.
-do.
-do.
-do.
-do.
-do.
-do.
-do.
Post office
Mooresville
...do-
Statesville
...do
...do
Troutman
Clayton
.-.do
Selnia
...do
...do
Smith field...
Sanford
Kinston
...do
Lincolnton...
.---do
...do
...do
.---do -
.---do-^yj:'—-!..
....doJ^r!^.:.'-?A-
....do : -
...do
.---db
...-do-
....do- --.
....do
Southside
Marion -
....do
...-do
Marshall
c;;harlotte
....do..
....do...
....do
....do -
....do
..--do -
..--daiiT-'iv...!.'.'^.
..-.do
....do-
....do
....do
North Charlotte.
Charlotte -.
....do-- -.-
-.-.do-
Mill
Cascade Mills, Inc
Mooresville Cotton Mills...
Bloonifield Mfg. Co
Paola Cotton Mills, Inc
The Statesville Cotton Mills
Superior Yarn Mills...
Hall-Kale Mfg. Co....
Clayton Cotton Mills
Liberty Cotton Mill Co
Eastern Mfg. Co
Ethel Cotton Mills*
Selma Cotton Millf.
Ivanhoe Mfg. Co.t.
Sanford Cotton Mills..
Caswell Cotton Mills, Inc
Kinston Cotton Mills
Anderson Mills, Inc
Boger & Crawford Spinning Mill.
Elm Grove Cotton Mills.
Eureka Mfg. Co
Excell Mfg. Co., Inc
Indian Creek Mills, Inc.
Laboratory Cotton Mills
Long Shoals Cotton Mills
Melville Mfg. Co.§
Rhodes-Rhyne Mfg. Co
Roseland Spinning Mills, Inc
John Rudisill Mfg. Co
Saxony Spinning Co
Wampum Cotton Mills, Inc
Lincoln Cotton Mills
Clinchfield Mfg. Co
Cross Cotton Mill
Marion Mfg. Co -.
Capitola Mfg. Co
Atherton Mills
Barber Mfg. Co
Barnhardt Mfg. Co
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., Mill No. 1
Chadwick-Hoskins Co
Chadwick-Hoskins Co
Chadwick-Hoskins Co
Chadwick-Hoskins Co
Co-Lin Mills, Inc
Elizabeth Mills Co
Highland Park Mfg. Co
Holly Mfg. Co.t
Johnston Mfg. Co
Magnolia Mills
Southern Textile Banding Mills
Carl Stohn, Inc..
President
Mill No. 2
Mill No. 3
Mill No. 4
Mill No. h
A. F. Bruton
J. E. Sherrill
N. B. Mills
D. M. Auslet :
William Wallace
R. L. Stowe...:
J. Ed. Kale
Charles W. Home.
Charles W. Home.
C. W. Johnston
J. T. Broadbent.
J. C. Watkins....
F. C. Dunn
L. J. Mewborne.-
D. E. Rhyne
R. C. Boger
R. S. Reinhardt.
John C. Rankin.
C. E. Childs
D. P. Rhodes.--.
D. E. Rhyne
J. S. Mauney
D. P. Rhodes
R. L. Goode-
M. H. Cline
J. Frank Love
John C. Rankin
D. E. Rhyne
E. Mabrey Hart
D. E. Hudgins
Rignal W. Baldwin.
A. Q. Kale--
John C. Rankin
T. Burke
C. A. Misenheimer..
B. B. Gossett
B. B. Gossett...
B. B. Gossett...
B. B. Gossett-
B. B. Gossett
W. A. Reynolds
S. M. Robinson
C. W. Johnston
A. P. Rhyne
C. M. Johnston
A. C. Summerville..
A. C. Stohn.
'Report included in that of Eastern Mfg. Co. fSame as last report,
tidle. In bankruptcy since May 19, 1925. §Branch of Cherryville.
Cotton Mills 17
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
Roy K. McNeely
George C. Goodman.
L. N. Mills
A. L. Mills____
F. H. Bunch...
W. H. Satterfield..._
R. H. Kale
Charles G. Gulley...
D. L. Barbour
G. F. Lattimore
1906
1893
1903
1907
1893
1919
1922
1900
1907
1920
Capital
Stock
500.000
,300,000
106,900
117,100
183,000
600,000
193,.500
1.59,900
210,975
500,000
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
agent.,
agents,
agents,
both...
both...
both...
direct.,
agents,
agent.,
agent..
Agent's Name
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Cannon Mills, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa
Various agents in New York and Philadelphia
Franklin D'Olier & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Johnston Mill Co., Charlotte, N. C
W. E. Thatcher. 1904
'J. R. Jones
W. D. LaRoque..
J. V. Moseley
Thorne Clark....
Alfred Crawford.
J. R. Reinhardt-.
J. L. Lineberger.
W. H. Childs
Paul Rhodes
D. E. Rhyne
D. H. Mauney...
1907
1898
1919
1918
1890
1907
1922
1920
1888
1896
299,600
300,000
81.500
100.000
72.000
125,000
300,000
agents,
agent.,
both...
agents,
direct.,
agent.,
agents,
direct.,
direct.,
both...
agent..
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City..
Pyam L. Gilkey, Philadelphia, Pa
Commission merchants in New York and Phila
Currin & Barry, New York City
Paulson, Linkroum & Co., Tillinghast-Stiles Co,
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Commission house
Mauney-Steele Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Paul Rhodes
Webb Durham
J. O. Shuford
R. C. McLean
J. L. Lineberger
D. E. Rhyne.l
W. L. Morris
Eugene Cross
Sam L. Copeland
J. A. Anthony
S. M. Robinson
Frank Burke
T. M. Barnhardt, Jr..
E. C. Dwelle
E. C. Dwelle
E. C. Dwelle
E. C. Dwelle
E. C. Dwelle
T. H. Brockenbrough.
C. M. Robinson
J. L. Spencer... .,
A. D. Alexander.
Mrs. Rosa J. Stokes..
A. C. Summerville
1923
1923
1901
1910
1903
1896
1914
1916
1909
1903
1892
1925
1900
1904
1901
1885
1897
1893
200,000
78,000
31,800
150,000
522,500
agent. Wilson & Bradbury, Inc., New York City.
1,500,000
313,200
625,000
64,500
175,000
30,000
1917
1891
1924
1901
1922
3,800,000
3,800,000
3,800,000
3,800,000
3,800,000
9,000
225,000
2,127,600
135,000
775,000
135,000
agent.,
direct.,
agent.,
both...
agent.,
direct.,
agent.,
both...
agent.,
direct.,
direct.,
agents,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent.,
agent..
Lowell Yarn Co., Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.
Commission house
Leslie, Evans & Co., New York City
Ridley, Watts & Co., New York City.
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
F. A. Dakin.
agent,
mill...
agent,
both.,
direct,
direct.
Turner-Halsey Co., New York City
Turner-Halsey Co., New York City
Turner-Halsey Co., New York City
Turner-Halsey Co., New York City
Turner-Halsey Co., New York City
Cannon Mills, New York City
Lowell Yarn Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Frederick Victor & Achelis, New York City.
18 i^ORTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1-
County
Mecklenburg..
...do
.._do
_..do
_-.do
.__do
Montgomery-
...do
_..do
Moore
...do
...do
Nash
New Hanover.
..__do --.
Orange -.
...do
..__do
....do
Pasquotank..
Person. _.
....do
....do
Pitt.
Polk
Randolph
-...do ----
----do- --
.---do
-...do
---.do
..--do
Richmond
....do
--..do
..-.do
....do.
....do.. -
.-.-do ---
....do
....do
Robeson
----do
----do
----do—-
----do---
---do
-...do
Rockingham.
....do
Post office
Charlotte
Cornelius
...do
Davidson
Huntersville.--
Paw Creek
Biscoe
Troy---
.-..do—
Hemp
High Falls-. --
Vass
Rocky Mount-
Wilmington---
..-.do-.
Carrboro
Carrboro
Hillsboro
----do ---.
MUl
Elizabeth City
Roxboro
...a-G-l :.:.-. .---.:
.--do- ---
Greenville —
Columbus. --
Asheboro.- .'-J
Central Falls-
Coleridge
Franklinville
Ramseur -
Randleman
Worthville.
Rockingharii.. - - - .
.---do 1
.---do -.-
....RoLtC-.^JAt
....do..-..::.
.---do- ------
.---do-
...-do:
Lumberton
.---do
.-..do... -
..--do-
--.-do
....do
Draper
----do
Savona Mfg. Co -
Cornelius Cotton Mills-.
Gem Yarn Mills
Davidson Cotton Mills.
Anchor Mills Co .--
Kendall Mills, Inc
Aileen Mills, Inc.-
Rhyne-Anderson Mills Co
Smitherman Cotton Mills
County Moore Mills, Inc
High Falls Mfg. Co.V-Vass
Cotton Mill Co
Rocky Mount Mills...
Bellwill Cotton Mills..
Delgado Mills
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 4-
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 7-
Belle-Vue Mfg. Co -
Eno Cotton Mills
President
Elizabeth City Cotton Mills
A. T. Baker & Co., Inc
Laura Cotton Mills
Roxboro and Longhurst Cot. Mills
Greenville Cotton Mills
Columbus Cotton Mills, Inc.
Sapona Cotton Mills, Inc
Pennsylvania Textile Mills, Inc...
Enterprise Mfg. Co
The Randolph Mills, Inc
Columbia Mfg. Co
Deep River Mills, Inc
Leward Cotton Mills
Entwistle Mfg. Co
Great Falls Mfg. Co
Hannah Pickett Mills, Inc .-
Leak Mfg. Co
Leak, Wall & McRae, Inc —-
Ledbetter Mfg. Co
Pee Dee Mfg. Co
Roberdel Mfg. Co
Steele's Mills -
Jennings Cotton Mills, Inc -.-
Mansfield Mills, Inc -.
National Cotton Mills, Inc
Cape Fear Cotton Mills Co...
Ernaldson Cotton Mills Co
The McEachern Cotton Mills Co.-
St. Pauls Cotton Mill Co
Draper American Millf
Wearwell Sheeting Millf
Charlie C. Lima
C. W. Johnston
F. C. Sherrill
M. L. Cannon..
C. W. Johnston.
Henry P. Kendall
John C. Rankin
E. O. Anderson
Mrs. T. J. Smitherman
W. W. Cowgill
J. W. Woody.
A. Cameron
A. P. Thorji
John D. Bellamy.
Hargrove Bellamy
C. McD. Carr
C. McD. Carr
S. Strudwick
J. C. Webb --
Charles H. Robinson.
A. T. Baker, Jr
J. A. Long
J. A, Long -
J. A. Long--
W. T. Hammett
D. B. McCrary
Louis Hammer
R. L. Caveness
John W. Clark
E. C. Watkins
J. C. Watkins
J. L. Lewis
William Entwistle
D. L. Gore
Robert L. Steele
W. L. Parsons
F. W. Leak
H. D. Ledbetter
George P. Entwistle.-
H. C. Wall
J. W. Porter
H. B. Jennings
H. B. Jennings
H. M. McAllister
J. M. Butler, Mgr
A. R. McEachern
J. M. Butler-
*Same as last report. fDepartment of Carolina Cotton and Woolen Mills Co., Spray, N. C.
Cotton Mllls 19
Continued.
William A. Beadle-
F. C. Stough
Joe A. Sherrill
M. L. Cannon
J. A. Spencer
Henry P. Kendall
H, C. Long, Jr
Milton Ensor
D. D. Bruton
W. W. Cowgill
1906
1923
1920
1920
Capital
Stock
S 500,000
48.600
200,000
325,000
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
500,000
200,000
219,000
227,000
agent_
agent-direct-direct,
agent,
direct,
both--
com. -.
agent,
agent-
Agent's Name
Bacon & Co., New York City---
Frederick Victor & Achelis, New York City.
T. Holt Haywood, New York City.
James L. Wilson & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Ridley, Watts & Co., New York City
No.
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
A. M. Cameron--
T. B. Bunn
J. W. Williamson
Thomas R. Ames-
A. H. Carr
A. H. Carr
T. N. Webb
J. H. Webb
J. G. Gregory
M. Z. McGill
R. L. Harris
R. L. Harris
M. R. Long
F. W. Blanton
W. J. Armfield
Louis Hammer
F. C. Caveness
J. Harper Erwin, Jr
I. F. Craven-----..
M. S. Sherwood
W. L. Ward
George P. Entwistle..
Mrs. Claude Gore.-.
W. B. Cole
J. LeGrand Everett
J. LeGrand Everett
J. M. Ledbetter
R. R. Simmons
J. LeGrand Everett
J. W. McKenzie
F. P. Gray
F. P. Gray
A. P. McAllister
1910
1818
1874
1899
1910
1911
1904
1896
1896
1917
1900
1914
1925
1916
1924
1904
1923
1879
1911
1913
1909
107,800
1,000,000
100,000
275,000
419,600
1,177,000
300,000
300,000
60,000
461,300
100,000
100,000
75,000
1906
1925
1887
1882
1874
1882
1895
1909
1922
1906
25,000
400,000
160,000
720,000
400,000
515,000
200,000
200,000
600,000
100,000
25,000
375,000
375,000
365,300
256,000
1,100,000
220,000
W. D. Johnson.
A. R. McEachern.
1920
1920
1907
1905
1916
300,000
4C0.000
200,000
direct.,
agents,
agents,
agent--
both---
both---
agent.-
agent.-
Frederick Vietor & Achelis, New York City
William Iselin & Co., New York City
J. B. Cameron, Philadelphia, Pa
J. B. Cameron, Philadelphia, Pa
William Iselin & Co., New York City
Cone Export and Comm. Co., Greensboro and
New York
both.,
direct-agent-agent-agent-direct.
direct.
John F. Street & Co., Providence, R. I.-
John F. Street & Co., Providence, R. I..
John F. Street & Co., Providence, R. I..
Southern Yarn Co., Tryon, N. C
comm.
agent-,
agent.,
agent _-
agent.,
agent-,
agent-,
agent-,
agent-,
agent-,
both...
agent.,
agent-,
agent-both--
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City-
Joshua L. Baily & Co., New York City
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City-
The Parish Company, New York City
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City-
Number of commission merchants
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City-
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City.
both Hunter Mfg. and Comm. Co., New York City_.
agents
both.,
agent.
both.,
direct,
direct.
Buchanan-Hicks Co., St. Louis, Mo.
20 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1-
County Post office Mill Presidont
Rockingham.
..._do
...do
...do...
...do
...do
.._.do ---
..._do...
Rowan
...do
.-._do_ --.
....do
....do
.-..do....
....do...
....do..-.
.---do ---.
....do---
....do
...do
Rutherford..
...do
...do
.---do ---
.-..do.--
...do
...do
.-..do
...do--
...do
.-.-do
Scotland
...do--
...do
...do
...do
Stanly.-
.---do
...do
..--do
Surry
Transylvania...
Union.-
.---do-
---.do..
....do.-
-...do..
Vance,
---.do..
Leaksville
Reidsville
Spray
-..do ---.
.--do-
...do
...do
.--do ---
China Grove.
...do
Landis
..--do^
Rockwell
Salisbury
.-.-do- --
....do
.-..do ---.
.---do -.-
.-.-do---
....do
Caroleen
ClifTside ..-
Ellenboro
FoWst City
.---do ---.
Rutherfordton .
....do
Spindale
.---do --.
...do
....do-
Laurel Hill
Laurinburg
....do.
.---do
..--do
Albemarle
....do
Norwood
Oakboro
Mount Airy
Brevard--
Marshville
Monroe
...do -.
...do
Waxhaw
Henderson.
-.-do
Wearwell Bedspread Mill*...
Edna Cotton Mills
Leaksville Cotton Mills
Lily Mill*
Morehead Cotton Mills Co
Nantucket Mill*.
Rhode Island Mill*
Spray Cotton Mills-
China Grove Cotton Mills Co
Patterson Mfg. Co
Corriher Mills Co
Linn Mills Co
Barringer Mfg. Co
Diamond Cotton Mills
Kcsler Mfg. Co
Klumac Cotton Mills, Inc
Marsh Cotton Mills, Inc.t -
Rowan Cotton Mills Co -.
The Salisbury Cotton Mills
W. S. Forbes
B. Frank Mebane.
B. Frank Mebane.
Vance Cotton Mill..
The Henrietta Mills, Nos. 1 and 2.
ClifTside Mills
Ellenboro Mfg. Co.t
Alexander Mfg. Co ,
The Florence Mills
The Cleghorn Mills Co
Grace Cotton Mill Co -.
The Horn Co
The Spencer Mills Co
The Spindale Mills Co
Stonecutter Mills Co
Morgan Cotton Mills
Dickson Cotton Mills...
Prince Cotton Mills
Scotland Cotton Mills
Waverly Cotton Mills Co
Efird Mfg. Co -.-.
Wiscassett Mills Co
Norwood Mfg. Co
Oakboro Cotton Mill
Laurel Bluff Cotton Mills
Sapphire Cotton Mills
Marshville Mfg. Co
Icemorlee Cotton Mills, Inc.
Manetta Mills.
Monroe Mills Co
Rodman-Heath Cotton Mills.
Harriett Cotton Mills
Henderson Cotton Mills
William Schoenheit.
A. C. Lineberger
VV. J. Swink
J. P. Linn
D. B. Coltrane
C. A. Cannon--
C. A. Cannon
C. A. Cannon
C. H. Kluttz
T. B. Marsh
A. C. Lineberger
C. S. Morris
A. C. Lineberger--.
C. M. Woodford....
Charles H. Hayne.
W. H. Beck---
J. B. Lattimore
A. J. Cumnock
K. S. Tanner
K. S. Tanner
K. S. Tanner-
S. B. Tanner, Jr....
J. H. Thomas
W. H. Belk
Edwin Morgan
James L. McNair.-
James L. McNair..
James L. McNair..
James L. McNair..
J. S. Efird
Mrs. D. H. Blair...
D. B. Coltrane
J. A. Grover '.-..
R. A. Love
Arthur J. Fleming.
S. M. Robinson
Arthur J. Draper--
H. B. Heath
C. W. Johnston
Mrs. H. J. Rodman.
S. P. Cooper
S. P. Cooper
*Department of Carolina Cotton and Woolen Mills Co., Spray, N. C. fldle.
Cotton Mixls 21
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
J. B. Pipkin.
E. V. Hobbs_
J. H. Marshall-
Karl Bishopric
John H. Rutledge_
P. A. Earnhardt---
L. A. Corriher
G. O. Lipe
C. E. Stevenson
C E. Stevenson...
C. E. Stevenson...
W. J. McCanless...
F. J. Murdock
A. E. Davis
Henry_W. Davis...
B. M
J. H.
Z. O.
J. A.
J. R.
D. D.
R. R.
T. F.
T. Me
K. S.
K S.
K. S.
J. W.
D. T.
D. F.
D. T.
D. T.
H. L.
J. A.
J. F
J. A
Gillon
Thomas.-.
Jenkins--
Martin
Moore
. Little
Flack
Gates
IX Watson-
Tanner...
Tanner
Tanner
Phillips...
Blue
Blue
Blue
Blue
Horton...
Grover
Shinn
Grover
George Norwood...
Smith Medlin
E. O. Fitzsimmons-
R. A. Willis
R. H. Johnston
Miss Pearl Rodman-
L. C. Kensly
1917
1896
1899
1900
1901
1898
1904
1896
1921
1887
1900
1907
1919
1895
1919
1916
1919
1891
1886
1902
1925
1918
1899
1909
1919
1921
1916
1918
1920
1893
1899
1919
1898
1909
1923
1920
1907
1923
1922
1924
1897
1900
Capital
Stock
480,000
30,000
163,900
1,500,000
850,000
420,000
400.000
500,000
220,200
300,000
750,000
200,000
600,000
250,000
300,000
250,000
100,000
792,900
500,000
75,000
250,000
47,200
327,900
350,000
840,000
500,000
200,000
600,000
120,000
250,000
150,000
,600,000
600,000
225,000
100,000
270,000
112,000
668,700
125,000
50,000
1,264,400
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
direct-
agent--
direct--
direct.-
direct..
direct.,
direct.,
both...
agents,
agents,
agents,
agents,
direct.,
both...
agent.,
agent..
direct,
agent.
agent,
agent,
agent.
agent.,
agent.,
both---
agent.-
agent..
agent-,
direct.,
agents,
direct.,
both...
agents,
agent.,
agents,
direct.,
agents
both.--
direct--
agent-.
leased-agent-.
agent
agent
on comm.
both
Agent's Name
Woodford & Morehouse, New York City-
Various
Cotton Products Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
L. P. Muller & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
L. P. Muller & Co., Cannon Mills, Phila., Pa.
Cannon Mills, New York City
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City.
Cone Export and Comm. Co., New York City
and Greensboro, N. C.
Cone Export and Comm. Co., New York City.
Woodford & Morehouse, New York City
Cone Export and Comm. Co., New York City.
Wilson & Bradbury, Inc., New York City...
Catlin & Co., New York City
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
Frederick Victor & Achelis, New York City.
H. B. Schaeffer, New York City
Fred'k Vietor & Achelis; T. Holt Haywood Dept.
Various.
Several..
Several..
Several..
Cannon Mills, Inc., Phila. and New York..
Schell, Longstreth & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
VariouS-Turner-
Halsey Co., New York City
Cleft & Goodrich, Inc., New York City; Camp-bell
& Van Olinda, Utica, N. Y
Cannon Mills, Inc., New York City
Johnston Mills Co., Charlotte, N. C
No.
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
.357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
22 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 1-
No. County Post office Mill President
396 Wake Neuse Mfg. Co Kenneth Gant
397
398
do Caraleigh Mills Co J. R. Chamberlain
do do Consolidated Textile Corp. Pilot
do do
T. B. Spencer
399
400
Raleigh Cotton Mills T. A. Webb
do Wake Forest Royall Cotton Mills R. E. Royall.
Peck Mfg. Co Thomas D, Peck
402 The Borden Mfg. Co.. F. K. Borden
403
404
405
Wilkes Ronda Cotton Jlill*
....do
do
North Wilkesboro---
Roaring River
Wilson
S. V. Tomlinson
Yadkin Cotton Mills... R. D. Grier
406 Wilson Cotton Mills Co R. G. Briggs
Idle.
Cotton Mllls 23
Continued.
Secretary
or
Treasurer
-0
03
Capital
Stock
Product
Sold
Direct or
Through
Agents?
Agent's Name No.
H. H. Harris
W. D. Briggs
1912
1893
1893
1889
1901
1910
1900.
1920
1918
1925
1912
S 240,000
435,000
agent
agent
agent
both
agent
agent
both. _.
Consolidated Selling Co., New York City
Consolidated Selling Co., New York City
Consolidated Selling Co., New York City
James E. Mitchell Co., Philadelphia, Pa
Stevens Yarn Co., New York, N. Y.
396
397
398
George E. Greason___
W. L. Royall
235,500
222,000
262,800
900,000
191,,500
146,300
399
400
R. T. Watson Cannon Mills, Philadelphia, Pa 401
P. L. Borden 40''
403
J. R. Hix agent Schell, Longstreth & Co., Philadelphia, Pa 404
405
F. L. Carr 88,000 both Numerous. _ 406
24 ISToRTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2
—
Mills, Articles
Mill
Aurora Cotton Mills
Burlington .Mills, Inc
Elmira Cotton Mills
Glencoe Mills
E. M. Holt Plaid Mills, Inc
King Cotton Mills Corp
The Lakeside Mills
Stevens Mfg. Co
Consolidated Textile Corp.
(Hopedale Division)
Consolidated Textile Corp.
(Ossipee Division)
Holt, Gant & Holt Cot. Mfg. Co
Glen Raven Cotton Mills
L. Banks Holt Mfg. Co
Saxapahaw Cotton Mills
Sidney Cotton Mills_.._
Travora Mfg. Co,, No. 1
White-Williamson Co
Holt-Granite Puritan Mills
Travora Mfg. Co., Plant No. 2.
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 15.
Virginia Cotton Mills
Watts Spinning Co
Liledoun Mfg. Co
Miller Mfg. Co
North State Cotton Mill
Taylorsville Cotton MilL _
Wade Mfg. Co
Wadesboro Cotton Mill Co
Bladenboro Cotton Mills
Asheville Cotton Mills
French Broad Mill of Martel
Mills, Inc
Martel Mills, Inc --.
Beacon Mfg. Co.*
Henry River Mfg. Co
Blue Ridge Cotton Mill
Alpine Cotton Mills
Valdese Mfg. Co -.
Waldensian Weavers, Inc
Brown Mfg. Co
Cabarrus Cotton Millf
Cannon Mfg. Co.f
Franklin Cotton Mills
Gibson Mfg. Co --.
Hartsell Mills Co
Hobarton Mfg. Co
Locke Cotton Mills Co
Norcott Mills Co., Inc
Renfrew Mfg. Co.t
Roberta Mfg. Co
White-Parks Mill Co
Postoffice
Burlington.
....do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do. _
..__do
..-.do
...do
Glen Raven__
Graham _
....do
..._do
._-_do
...do .-
Haw River...
..__do
Mebane
Swepsonville.
Stony Point..
Taylorsville..
...do _._
...do
...do -___
Wadesboro. --
_..do
Bladenboro...
Asheville
...do
.-__do
Swannanoa..
Henry River.
Maiden ._
Morganton...
Valdese
..-.do
Concord
.---do
.-..do
-..do
...do
...do -
..-do
---do -...
---do
---do
---do
Concord
Spinnii'g
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Both
Both
Both
Both
Weaving.
Both
Both
Weaving.
Elon College Spinning
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Spinning-
Spinning-
Both
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both-
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Weaving
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Weaving
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Class of Goods Manufactured
Dress ginghams, sport flannels
Cotton rayon
Cotton and rayon .-
Flannelette
Fancy dress ginghams, rayon, etc
Carded hosiery and underwear
Indigo plaids and stripes
Fancy cotton and rayon dress fabric.
Cotton yarns-
Cotton and flannel goods
Ticks, sheeting, denim cloth- -..
Awning stripes .--
Colored plaids, ticks, chambrays, etc.
Ginghams
Plaids
Canton flannels
Ginghams .-
Staple and fancy dress goods
Yarns , warp- -
Yarns
Cotton dress goods, art silk
Yarn- _
Yarn
Yarn
Yarn -.
Yarn
Outing
Yarns
Yarns, plush, hosiery, and underwear-
Cotton chambrays-- -
Bedspreads (rayon), cotton toweling.
Bedspreads
Cotton blankets and napped goods...
Fine combed yarn
Yarn
Coarse yarn --- ---
Hosiery and underwear yarns--
Rayon filled goods
Flannelettes
Sheeting and yarn
Huck towels and sheeting
Yarn _
Cotton piece goods.-
Damask, rayon bedspreads, yarns
Cotton piece goods
Gingham and shirting
Hosiery ..-
Yarns -
Hosiery yarns
Hosiery yarns ---
'Began operation July, 1925. fBranch of Kannapolis. tBranch of parent company. Adams. Mass.
Cotton Mili.s 25
Manufactured, Equipment, Etc.
Number
Spindles
19,520
10,080
10,000
5,000
10,092
3,264
13,768
4,960
6,496
4,104
28,656
7,944
4,120
3,672
8,200
22,304
8,756
10,080
,.14.272
.'10,000
'' 5,760
6,720
5,040
/ 7,200
13,609
14,000
39,328
13,240
512
5,712
2,880
JsTm
4,000
10,500
14,000 U15,916
28,016
30,000
29,536
27,000
13,184
35,912
12,096
7,256
6,000
4,032
Number
Looms
847
230
657
206
500
235
142
160
282
287
120
989
324
192
310
324
800
400
200
200
176
168
430
480
784
604
116
112
1,240
75
Number
Cards
33
56
24
109
40
48
18 sets
24
35
51
132
56
Power
steam and electric.
electric
electric
water
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric.
steam, water, and electric,
steam and water
steam
electric
water. __
electric
electric
water
steam, water, and electric.
electric. _
electric
electric
electric
water and electric
water
electric and steam
steam
electric
electric and steam
electric
electric
electric. _.
electric
electric
water and electric.
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
steam and electric.
electric
electric
steam and electric.
electric
electric
electric
steam and electric.
electric
electric
electric
Number
Horse-power
1,500
650
750
350
327
300
160
100
525
225
250
600
150
450
300
1,000
400
608
1,000
625
665
4,151
170
265
1,200
575
3,000
700
750
900
350
100
600
650
150
450
2,000
1,160
2,300
800
225
2,000
310
330
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
1,532,273
1,000,000
1,000,000
500,000
865,000
1,650,000
437,284
836,743
735,145
364,424
528,315
2,184,810
305,720
550,000
1,000,000
50,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
537,300
613,000
1,500,000
701,073
638,341
260,000
858,172
2,500,000
5,315,366
1,727,432
3,190,000
2,000,000
222,000
75,000
700,000
2,750,000
100,000
1,987,950
5,000,000
2,000,000
3,119,445
2,500,000
639,850
3,000,000
2,000,000
704,000
2,160,000
1,920,000
Estimated
Yearly
Output
SI, 240, 000
750,000
1,250,000
1,125,000
600,000
250,000
611,702
927,811
162,768
300,000
1,500,000
200,000
200,000
430,000
250,000
1,650,000
430,000
250,000
400,000
750,000
281,400
259,646
90,000
396,635
1,000,000
400,000
2,075,000
1,000,000
600,000
93,000
10,000
2,000,000
1,250,000
600,000
1,000,000
2,000,000
1,263,707
816,040
412,747
1,800,000
1,000,000
273,000
729,600
400,000
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
268
275
300
276
179
194
170
289
200
201
285
254
202
252
275
224
256
283
265
290
275
300
226
200
225
300
150
280
262^
240
255
300
26 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2
—
Mill
Cabarrus Cotton Mills
Cannon Mfg. Co
Kindly Cotton Mills
Tusparora Cotton Mill
Dudley Shoals Cotton Mill
Falls Mfg. Co
Granito Falls Mfg. Co
Southern Mfg. Co.
Caldwell Cotton Mills
Hudson Cotton Mfg. Co
Lenoir Cotton Mills
Moore Cotton Mill_ _.
Nelson Cotton Mill Co
Steele Cotton Mill
Whitnol Cotton Mill Co
United Mills Co
Watts Cotton Mill
Rhodhiss Mills Co
Brookford Mills Co
Hickory Spinning Co
Ivey Mill Co
A. A. Shuford Mill Co
Long Island Cotton Mills Co...
Blue Ridge Cotton Mill
Carolina Cotton Mill
James Cotton Mill, Inc., No. 2.
Liberty Spinning Co
Union Cotton Mills
Catawba Cotton Mills*.
City Cotton Mills Co
Yount Cotton Mill.
•T. M. Odell Mfg. Co..
Ponipton-Lakes Weaving Co...
Hadley-Peoples Mfg. Co
Edenton Cotton Mills...
Minette Mills.
Bonnie Cotton Mill
Cora Cotton Mills
Dilling Cotton Mills.
Kings Mountain Mfg. Co
Margrace Mills Co
Mason Cotton Mills Co
Park Yarn Mills Co
Patricia MiUs, Inc
Pauline Mills, Inc..
Phenix Mills Co.....
Sadie Cotton Mills, Inc
Cleveland Mill and Power Co.
Belmont Cotton Mills Co
Cleveland Cloth Mills, Inc
Consolidated Textile Co. (Ella
Division)
Double Shoals Mfg. Co
Kannapolis
....do
Mount Pleasant-.
...do...
Granite Falls
....do
...do
...do
Lenoir
...do
....do
...do
...do
....do
...-do
Mortimer
Patterson
Rhodhiss
Brookford
Hickory
....do _.__
.-..do
Long Island
Maiden
.---do
.-..do
....do
....do..-..
Newton
..--do
.---do
Pittsboro.
..-.do
Siler City
Edenton
Grover
Kings Mountain.
....do
..-.do
...do
....do
...do
...do
..-.do
....do
....do
....do.-
Lawndale.
Shelby
.do.
Shelby.
---do-.
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Both
Both
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning-
Spinning-
Weaving -
Spinning-
Spinning.
Weaving
Spinning-
Spinning-
Both
Spinning-
Both
Spinning-
Spinning-
Weaving-
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning-
Weaving
Both
Spinning.
Class of Goods Manufactured
Sheeting, pillow tubing, fabrics
Huck towels, sheeting, etc
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns
Carded yarns
Combed cotton yarns
Cotton yarns and wrapping twine..
Cotton yarns for insulating trade..
Yarn
Yarn
Yarn
Yarns
Yarns.
Yarn
Yarn
Yarn
Hosiery yarns
Drills and sheeting
Fancy dobby goods
Cotton yarns
Sateens..
Cotton yarns and wrapping twine..
Yarn
20-2 tubes _
Yarn
Yarns.
Tinged stock, tubes
Yarns, twines, and cords
Cotton yarns
Canton flannels _.
Cotton yarn
Knitting yarns
Woven labels
Cotton yarns..
Cotton yarns
Damask, napkins, and bedspreads.
Yarns
Yarns
Combed yarns, fancy cloth..
Yarns
Bedspreads
Yarns.
Carpet yarns
Napkins and draperies
Draperies...
Prints
Fine combed yarns
Rope, carpet warp
Skeins and warp
Fancy fabrics.
Print cloth
Cotton twines
*Same as last report.
Cotton Mllls 27
Continued.
Number
Spindles
Number
Looms
Number
Cards
Power
Number
Horse-power
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
Estimated
Yearly
Output
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
No.
96,620
116,000
5 156
1,221
4,000
394
412
15
16
12
27
84
16
24
18
21
44
30
18
18
33
12
116
52
56
12,434,573
26,000,000
715,460
765,000
422,351
623,972
4,920,000
748,144
125,000
70,000
55,000
55,000
75,000
800,000
65,000
1,000,000
407, 700
5,955,171
2,532,000
2,000,000
520,000
1,600,000
1,305,000
15,000
1,350,000
$ 270
280
345
230
220
2.50
230
.300
300
300
300
300
300
300
300
221
250
296
300
240
250
300
300
2:0
260
51
electric 10,000
200
175
225
250
800
200
14,000.000
200,000
275,000
207,675
294.660
1,704,630
232,027
3i4,000
343,000
288.000
388.000
259,000
400,000
335,000
350,000
110,894
1,941,029
1.300.000
800.000
309,199
716,933
497,884
60,000
450,000
800,000
105.000
375.000
145.000
450,000
150.000
443,165
75,000
517.264
900.000
450 000
280,000
655,000
801.945
2.38.000
375.000
500.000
400
260,000
300,000
540,000
250,000
800,000
52
53
5.760
i6 000
electric 54
55
* 6 000 5fi
9,828 electric
electric
57
3,000 58
6 048 5<»
4 992 60
6 720 61
5,376 electric. _ 300 6''
6 048 63
6,020 electric 250 64
6,272 65
600
4,248
electric
water and steam
300
190
6&
67
30,000 900
632
400
68
18.368
12,000
15,360
4,696
steam, water, electric
electric.
electric
electric
water
steam
1,150
400
500
400
300
100
69
70
71
79
6,312 18
10
T^
2,600
13,000
74
75
8,200 25
8
22
14
32
14
32
76
3,000 electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
water and electric
electric
electric
electric and steam
electric
steam
electric
electric
electric
electric
150
350
275
200
300
550
50
450
1,100
125
400
950
1,000
200
400
275,000
900,000
375,000
1,250,000
400,000
1,505,785
5,000
1,534,048
2,046,461
600,000
70,000
1,665,000
1,658,044
680,000
450,000
800,000
2,080,000
520,000
414,500
1,145,742
77
10,404
7,168
9 78
7<»
/ 5,000
L 8,160
84 300 80
81
12,000 ^'>
20 "300
303
2."9
300
290
270
83
9,796 84-
22,384 62
30
54
50
18
14
85
40
150
96
86
8,320
20,800
21,189
87
88
6,500 9f>
5,184
10,080
225
200
225
307
91
q9
4,896 steam
electric
500
100
300
700
250
1,500
Q3
170
150
400
14
48
14
01
4.752 95
15,784 electric
electric
96
5,544 97
6,000 1,900,000
750,000
250 98
4,950 14
22
21
electric 99
150
253
electric _ . . 100
11,328
3.200
electric. _
steam and water
550
150
1,250,000
700,000
625,000
190.000
300
270
101
102
28 ISToRTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2-
Mill
Dovor Mill Co
Eastsido Mfg. Co
Lily Mill and Power Co
Ora Mills
Shelby Cotton Mills
Corlcy Mills, Inc
Cotton Products Co •--.
Holt-Williamson Mfg. Co....
Holt-Granite Puritan Mills Co.*
Tolar, Hart & Holt Mills....
Victory .Mfg. Co
Rockfish Mills, Incf-.
Dacotah Cotton Mill...
Erlanger Cotton Mill
Nokoniis Cotton Mill
Wabena Mills, Inc...
Wennonah Cotton Mills Co..
Amazon Cotton Mills
Jewel Cotton Mills
The Erwin Cotton Mills, No. 3.
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 1..
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 6..
Golden Belt Mfg. Co
Pearl Cotton Mills.
Yarbrough Mills, Inc
Durham Cotton Mfg. Co
Erwin Cotton Mills Co., No. 1.
Erwin Cotton Mills Co., No. 4.
Fountain Cotton Mills
Hart Cotton Mills, Inc
Arista Mills Co.
Inverness Mills Co
Sterling Cotton Mills
Vann-Moore Mill Co.|
Acme Spinning Co...
Belmont Fabric Co.§
Chronicle Mills
Climax Spinning Co
Crescent Spinning Co...
Eagle Yarn Mills, Inc
Imperial Yarn Mills
Linford Mills, Inc
Majestic Mfg. Co
National Yarn Mills, Inc
Perfection Spinning Co
Sterling Spinning Co
Stowe Spinning Co
American Cot. Mills, Inc., No. 1.
American Cotton Mill, No. 2...
Gambrill-Melville Co
George Cotton Mills
Osage Mfg. Co
Southern Cotton Industries*...
Postoffice
Shelby
...do
...do.
...do
...do
Cumberland.
Fayetteville..
...do
...do
...do
...do
Hope Mills...
Lexington
....do
...do
...do
...do..
Thomasville.
...do.
Coolcemee...
Durham
...do
...do.
...do
...do
East Durham
West Durham
...do
Tarboro...
...do
Winston-Salem
...do.
Franklinton
...do..
Belmont
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
....do
....do
....do
....do.
..-.do
....do
d\o
Bessemer City
....do
Bessemer City
....do
....do
....do
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Both
Both
Spinning..
Both
Both
Spinning..
Spinning..
Both
Spinning..
Both
Spinning..
Both
Both
Both
Spinning..
Both
Spinning..
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Weaving..
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Spinning..
Spinning..
Both
Spinn:
Spinn
Spinn
Spinn:
Spinn
Spinn
Spinn
Spinn
Spinni
Spinn
Spinn
Both
Both
Both
Spinning
Both
Class of Goods Manufactured
Fancy goods...
Sateens and fancy shirting
Cotton sewing thread
Specialties.
Cloth-pajama checks, sateens
Combed and carded yarns
Cotton batting
Yarn
Fancy colored cotton
Knitting yarn
Fancy goods
Cotton yarns
Chambrays
Paj ania checks
Dimity
Twine
Chambray, ticking
Combed knitting yarns
Fine combed yarns
Canton flannel, ticking, covert cloth.
Single carded yarns...
Single yarns
Sheetings, threads
Wide sheetings
Fancy dress goods
Ginghams, cheviots, etc
Denims, sheeting, pillow tubing
Sheeting, sheets, and pillow cases
Print cloth
Tuben, warp..
Colored goods
Sheeting and bedspreads
Ball warps, skeins, and tubes
Mercerizing yarns
Coarse fabric
Corded yarns
Combed yarns
Fine yarn
Yarns
Yarns
Fine cotton yarns, combed.
Fine combed yarns
Yarns
Mercerizing yarns
Fine combed yarns
Combed yarns
Tire fabric...
Tire fabric and sheeting
Sheeting
Yarns
Sheetings
*Idle. tSame as last report. fStarted operation May, 1926. Jew mill.
Cotton Mixls 29
Continued.
Number
Spindles
Number
Looms
Number
Cards
Power
Number
Horse-power
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
Estimated
Yearly
Output
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
No.
11 520 264
308
24
20
30
600 1,464,000
1,056,636
1,150,000
$1,000,000
600,000
700,000
276
290
lO.'?
11 264 104
7,000 500 105
lOfv
20 840 509 41
40
1,600,000
839,345
750,000 107
10,000 108
350
720
500
450
750
1,000
1,250
2,500
600
109
9,984
10 624
25
34
37
30
57
56
114
25
28
2,000,000 750,000 280 110
434 111
15,048 1,200,000
715,000
3,000,000
3,250,000
7,500,000
900,000
1,500,000
1,125,000
3,000,000
1,320,000
6,539,800
2,103,707
2,320,952
1,421,258
1,103,342
440,000
365,000
1,775,000
1,500,000
3,000,000
700,000
400,000
264
285
\n
14 336 490 ii;?
25 912 water and electric 114-
22 752 650
1,240
400
454
115
46 000 310 lift
15,296
3 500
electric and steam .- 117
118
12,508 119
19,872
12 480
156
36
163
72
50
46
30
1,200
575
2,000
1,200
1,016
1,000
500
1,000,000
840,000
3,018,055
701,329
545,000
350,000
885,000
1,970,086
2,600,830
1,300,000
907,316
282
275
259
275
275
295
250
120
1,296
121
47,360
16,976
U?.
steam and electric
steam and electric
123
13,824
26,496
13,664
568
240
100
800
522
1,030
336
224
448
216
124
125
12(>
127
23 936 52
79
140
37
47
18
52
600
1,822
2,680
750
1500 K.W.
1,000
452
1,282
1,692,900
2,502,100
4,992,550
1,500,000
2,347,000
241
258
270
306
299
300
128
27,328 129
49,440 130
13,296 131
17,428 132
18 960 133
7 680 979,566
4,090,091
399,000
1,333,320
134
25,856 237 nh
1.36
^'1^320
130
40
24
25
872
600
1,472,532 925,000 276 137
1 3,700 138
10,368 900,000
1,515,210
1,048,600
434,241
1,000,000
675,000
139
21,760 140
13,056 35
45
30
38
141
12,672 142
12,544 660,000
1,533,000
711,247
960,000
1,254,064
885,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
1,300,000
1,579,597
456.000
935,000
667,087
631,709
800,000
610,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
250,000
573,319
280
143
16,320 14+
12,768 145
15,236 40
40
146
16,320
13,060
electric 872 275 147
148
21,760
100
81
325
68
45
20
35
15
34
electric . 149
11,520 electric 575
325
921
1,50
5,000 15t
15,104 electric 241 1,52
5,000 1.53
16,272 388 650 2,000,000 800,000 284 1.54
155
30 North Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2-
Miil
Carlton Yarn Mills, Inc.
Chcrryville Mfg. Co
Gaston Mfg. Co.._
Howell .Mfg. Co
Rhyno-Houser Mfg. Co..
Wildan Mfg. Co.. .._
Cranicrton Mills, Inc
Mayflower Millf
Mays Millt
Dorothy Mfg. Co., Inc.
Arkray Mills, Inc
Arlington Cotton Mills
Armstrong Cotton Mills Co.
Arron Mills, Inc
Art Cloth Mfg. Co.-
The Avon Mills
Buffalo Mills, Inc
Clara Mfg. Co
Dixon Mills, Inc
Dunn Mfg. Co
Flint Mfg. Co
Gastonia Weaving Co...
Gray Mfg. Co
Groves Mills, Inc
Hanover Thread Mill, Inc..
Harden Mfg. Co
Loray Mills
Manville-.Ienckes Co
Modena Cotton Mills.. _
Monarch Cotton Mills Co...
Morowebb Cotton Mills Co.
Mountain View Mill, Inc
Mutual Cotton Mills Co
Myers Mills, Inc
Myrtle Mills, Inc
Osceola Mills, Inc
Ozark Mills
Parkdale Mills, Inc
Piedmont Spinning Mills
Pinkney Mills, Inc
Priscilla Spinning Co
Regan Spinning Co
Rankin .Mills
Ranlo Mfg. Co
Rex Spinning Co
Ridge Mills, Inc
Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc
Seminole Cotton Mills
A. M. Smyre Mfg. Co
Spencer Mountain Mills
Trenton Cotton Mills
Post office
Cherryville.
...do
...do
...do
...do
.__do_
Cramerton..
...do.
...do...
Dallas
Gastonia
.do.,
-do.,
.do.,
.do.,
.do.,
-do-,
-do-
.do.,
.do.,
.do.,
-do..
.do.,
.do-.
-do-
.do.
-do.
_do-
.do-
.do.
.do.
-do.
.do-
-do-
.do.
.do.
.do.
.do.
.do.
-do.
-do-
-do.
-do-
-do.
.do.
-do-
-do-
_do-
.do_
.do.
.do.
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Class of Goods Manufactured
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Spinning..
Spinning..
Spinning-.
Spinning-.
Spinning..
Weaving .
Spinning..
Spinning..
Spinning-.
Spinning..
Spinning..
Spinning..
Weaving..
Spinning..
Spinning..
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning-
Spinning-
Spinning-
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning-
Both
Spinning-
Combed yarns ,
Cotton yarn
Yarns
Cotton yarns
Combed yarns
Cotton yarns
Fine combed yarns, cotton cloth.
Yarn -
lOO's and 120's single and ply yarns;
86's single and ply peeler
Combed cotton yarns
Combed yarns, Nos. 6's to 26's- -.
Cotton yarns, 40's to 58's, 2-ply
Fine dress fabrics, draperies, etc
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns, 18/15-30/15
Combed yarns, Nos. 36's to 50's
Fine combed yarns
Combed yarns, 54's to 60's
Combed cotton yarns
Woven labels
80's single and ply fine yarns
High grade combed yarns of every
description
Cotton yarns
16/1 carded yarns
Fine fabrics
Fine fabrics -- -
Carded yarns...
Combed yarns
Combed peeler yarns
Cotton yarns
Combed yarns
Combed cotton yarns
Double carded cotton yarns
Cotton
Cotton yarns .--
Yarns, 30's to 40's and 68's, single ply.
Combed yarns. No. 20's
Combed yarns
Combed yarns
Combed cotton yarns
Combed yarns
Automobile tire fabric
Fine combed yarns
Combed yarns
Combed peeler yarns..
Cotton yarns, combed
Yarns. -
Corded yarns and cotton damask
Fine combed yarns
•Idle. fBranch of Cramerton Mills.
Cotton Mllls 31
Cmitinued.
Number
Spindles
Number
Looms
Number
Cards
Power
Number
Horse-power
Approxi-mate
.\mount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds 1
1
Estimated
Yearly
Output
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
No.
10,880
6,500
12,000
10,000
12,000
5,000
58,000
34
20
22
32
36
15
300
150,000
400
190,000
800,000
1,100,000
624.000
1,350.000
900,000
602,500
6,688,453
$ 600,000 ;
413,000 '
275,000
600,000
480,000
241,000
3,587,000
300
2C9
300
156
157
158
159
275
201
276
160
100,000
3,000
161
500
162
163
164
15,100
12,608
25,332
4,500
12,096
16
36
260
650
500,000
500,000
1,316,336
1,120,955
995,000
275,000
600,000
900,000
450,445
600,000
165
166
167
168
39
257 169
602
170
11,904
3,600
10,000
10,240
10,500
35,756
29
18
400
200
1,028,746
80,000
1,066,692
743,000
991,351
2,906,160
570,666
150,000
.535,119
.506,000
549,028
1,750,000
50,000
730,000
2,000,000
298,495
450,000
308
300
171
172
173
174
175
176
30 120 60
220
310
285
250
280
280
291
177
17,892
27,000
7,056
8,064
120,000
123,036
17,376
8,000
7 168
42 934,000
3,000,000
625,485
750,000
12,462,014
12,462,014
3,500,000
1,161,123
475,000
317,123
1,122,020
1,644,000
1,250.000
800,000
1,633,410
1,375,000
564,653
178
electric - .. — 179
19
28
373
416
100
410
350
180
181
433
433
182
183
steam and electric ._. 750 1,800,000
542,188
373,000
150,000
463,340
9Q0,OO0
800,000
491,904
847,555
740,000
223,716
184
185
- 18
11
250
360
310
285
186
4 3'0 water and electric - 187
6,500
13 ''48
188
40 750 280 189
12,768
10,080
22,000
15,264
2,500
10,000
15 150
190
29
55
60
579
700
285 191
192
220 193
194
195
40
23
24
40
46
electric. - --- 350
346
1,485,000
565,059
1,000,000
4,500,000
2,000,000
650,000
333,667
500,000
2.700,000
1,250,000
270 196
8,448
6,000
6,048
20,480
10,000
9,000
12,000
26,000
7,270
10,128
197
198
18 500 288
300
199
200
electric. 201
36 electric. . - 200 1,875,000
1,075,900
3,000,000
900,000
1,153,000
800,000
655,039
1,500,000
450,000
627.000
200 202
203
1,000
200
292
260
204
150 20 205
1 steam and electric 206
32 NoKTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2—
\'ictory Yarn Mills Co.
Wingct Yarn Mills Co..
High Shoals Mills
Manville-Jenckes, Inc..
Lowell Cotton Mills....
Peerless Mfg. Co.
McAden Mills
Adrian Mfg. Co.*
Alsace Mfg. Co.*
American Yarn and Processing
Co
Madera Spinning Mills*
Tuckasegee Spinning Co
Woodlawn Mfg. Co.*
Alba Mfg. Co
Catawba Spinning Co
Globe Yarn Mills
Lola Gingham Millf
Lola Mfg. Co
Oxford Cotton Mills...
Gem Cotton Mills.
Minneola Mfg. Co.
Pomona Mills
Proximity Mfg. Co —
Revolution Cotton Mills
Southern Webbing Mills, Inc.
White Oak Cotton Mills
Highland Cotton Mills
Millis Cotton Mills...
Pickett Cotton Mills, Inc
Oakdale Cotton Mills.
Roanoke Mills Co
Rosemary Mfg. Co
Patterson Mills Co., Inc
Audrey Spinning Mills
The Erwin Cotton Mills Co..
The Erwin Cotton Mills Co.!
Balfour Mills, Inc...
Green River Mfg. Co
Raeford Cotton Mills Co.
Cascade Mills, Inc...
Mooresville Cotton Mills
Bloomfield Mfg. Co
Paola Cotton Mills
Statesville Cotton Mills.
Superior Yarn Mills
Post office
Gastonia
...do
High Shoals.
...do
Lowell
.do-
McAdenville..
Mount Holly
...do
...do....
...do....
...do....
...do....
Stanley.
...do—
...do....
...do...
...do...
Oxford.
Burlington..
Gibsonville.
Greensboro.
...do
...do
...do..
...do
High Point.
...do
...do.
Jamestown
Roanoke Rapids.
...do
Rosemary
Weldon
Erwin
...do.
Balfour
Tuxedo
Raeford
Mooresville.
...do
Statesville.
...do
...do
...do
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning..
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Weaving.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Both
Weaving.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Class of Goods Manufactured
Combed yarns.
Combed yarns, 30's to 48's... _
Sheetings and fancy goods
Sheeting
30's to 80's ply yarn, hosiery, warp,
felling
70's to 80's ply and single hosiery
warp, felling
Corded cotton yarn and cotton flannel
Knitting yarn
Mercerizing warps.
Yarns. _
K. P. and C. P. yarn
C. P. yarn, 40-50..
Fancy gingham
C. P. and K. P. yarns
Cotton yarns, Nos. 8's, lO's, 12's, sin-gle
and ply
Yarns, 16's to 30's
Cotton flannels.
Pomona cloth, toyland cloth, bed-spreads,
etc
Denims
Cotton flannels
Elastic webbing
Denims
Hosiery yarns
Yarns, knitting
38^'. 64x60 5.35, and Nos. 24, 30, and
30 reverse hosiery yarn
Cotton twine
Outing flannels
Cotton damask
Ginghams, outings, suitings, rayons..
30j tubes, warps, skeins, and cones...
Indigo denims
Indigo denims
Print cloths
Fine combed yarns for lace, em-broidery,
weaving, and hosiery
Hosiery and warp yarns.
Fancy shirtings, silk and cotton nov-elties
Colored goods and fancy colors
Nos. 40's to 60's ball warps
Pure white yarn, 20 and 30/2 ply
Colored yarns
Combed yarns -
*Branch American Yarn and Processing Co. fldle. JShuttles. §Started operation Nov., 1925.
Cotton Mills 33
Continued.
Number
Looms
Number
Cards Power
Number
Horse-power
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used
Pounds
Estimated
Yearly
Output
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
610
600
electric
electric _._
water and electric,
water
electric.
electric
water and electric.
680
900
1,360
1,147,478
1,399.199
1,560,000
2,000,000
1,206,352
540,000
2,600,000
S 810,586
715,445
850,000
6,000,000
340,000
1,300,000
128 electric. 4,000,000 3,000,000
electric. 743,839 325,000 248
350
1,600
2,048
1330
3,000
336
1,742
1,272
1,000
1,152
1,152
300
1,820
34
24
72
70
249
221
311
124
22
42
38
154
144
52
14
192
209
36
18
30
39
181
20
14
oil engine.
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric,
electric,
electric.
hydro-electric
steam and electric. ..
hydro-electric
electric
steam and electric.
electric
electric
electric
water and steam.,
electric and water.
electric
hydro-electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric,
electric.
electric
electric and steam.
electric
electric
electric
electric and water..
100
150
100
150
200
500
420
234
1,250
3,500
3,000
30
4,800
1,600
365
800
675
3,000
2,500
1,400
398
3,191
2,942
750
400
400
600
3,009
350
550
340,000
610,000
410,000
210.000
710,000
2,225.000
707,870
1,489,833
2,350,000
10,000,000
8,.500, 000
130,000
20,000.000
5,656,500
1,250,000
1,741.000
2,305,850
6,974,170
5,276,669
1,372,919
470,000
900,500
430.000
840.000
530.000
424,000
894,000
750,000
250,000
1,500,000
4,000,000
4,000,000
200,000
8,000,000
1,682,000
450.000
800,000
850,000
3,870,620
4,004,904
999.372
2,50.000
4.132,390
2,400,000
1,200 bales
1,000,000
690,720
6,076,294
300,000
900,000
450 850,000
950,000
7.50,000
500,000
600,000
3,178.698
350,000
500,000
1,000,000
500,000
301
300
274
242
234
250
267
full
26
276
240
279
250
274
262
full
280
265
156
34 ISToRTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2-
Mill Postoffice
SpinniriK
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Class of Goods Manufactured
Hall-Kale Mfg. Co
Clayton Cotton Mills _.
Liberty Cotton Mill Co
Eastern Mfg. Co
Ethel Cotton Mills*
Selma Cotton Millf ---
Ivanhoe Mfg. Co.t-. --
Sanford Cotton Mills _.
Caswell Cotton Mills, Inc....
Kinston Cotton Mills
Anderson Mills, Inc
Boger& Crawford Spinning Mill
Elm Grove Cotton Mills
Eureka Mfg. Co...
Excell Mfg. Co., Inc
Indian Creek Mills, Inc
Laboratory Cotton Mills
Troutman..
Clayton
...do
Selma
...do -
...do
Smithfield..
Sanford
Kinston
.___do
Lincolnton.
...do
...do
..._do
....do
...do
...do _.
Long Shoals Cotton Mills
Melville Mfg. Co.§.._. ..-
Rhodes-Rhyne Mfg. Co
Roseland Spinning Mills
John Rudisill Mfg. Co
Saxony Spinning Co..
Wampum Cotton Mills, Inc...
Lincoln Cotton Mills
Clinchfield Mfg. Co
Cross Cotton Mills
Marion Mfg. Co.. _
Capitola Mfg. Co.. .-
Atherton Mills
Barber Mfg. Co _
Earnhardt Mfg. Co
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., No. 1
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., No. 2
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., No. 3
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., No. 4
Chadwick-Hoskins Co., No. 5
Co-Lin Mills, Inc
Elizabeth Mills Co
Highland Park Mfg. Co 1.
Holly Mfg. Co.t
Johnston Mfg. Co..
Magnolia Mills
Southern Textile Banding Mills
Carl Stohn, Inc
Savona Mfg. Co
Cornelius Cotton Mills.
Gem Yarn Mills
Davidson Cotton Mill..
Anchor Mills Co
Kendall Mills, Inc
...do..
...do
...do...
...do...
...do
...do.
...do.
Southside
Marion
...do
...do
Marshall
Charlotte
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do..
...do.. ---
.-..do
....do
North Charlotte.
Charlotte
....do
Charlotte
....do
Cornelius
...do
Davidson
Huntersville.
Paw Creek...
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Combed yarns
20's 2-ply yarns
20/2 ply warps and skeins
Hosiery and underwear yarns.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning..
Sheeting _.
Hosiery yarn
Sheeting
Hosiery and underwear yarns
Cotton yarns, carded and combed
Duck
Combed yarns.
Cotton yarns, 20 and 24/2 ply
Coarse waste yarns
Yarn
Yarns —
40/2 and 50/2 ply skeins, tubes, cone
yarn
Cotton yarn..
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Weaving
Both.
Both.
Both.
Both.
Both.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Bedspreads —
Carded yarns...
Yarn
Yarn
C. P. yarns..
Cotton yarns, 50/2 and 60/2, carded..
Wide print cloths.
Cotton knitting yarns
Wide print cloth
40/2 combed peeler skeins, cones, warps
Yarn
Narrow fabrics
Cotton batting and felts
Fine lawns, sateens, and pongee
Fine lawns -
Print cloths
Fine Lawns —
Sheetings —
Part linen toweling
Yarns — -
Ginghams
Weaving..
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Combed yarn. _
Hosiery splicing yarn, 40/1 to 60/1
Card banding for textile mills.
Corset goods and men's lounging robe
material --
Towels, napkins, damask cloth, etc...
Ginghams and chambray
Yarns
Yarns -
Ginghams
Hospital gauze
*Report included in that of Eastern Mfg. Co. fSame as last report. Jldle.
Cotton Mills 35
Continued.
pv^k^
Number
Spindles
Number
Looms
Number
Cards
Power
Number
Horse-power
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
Estimated
Yearly
Output
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
"I
No.
7,128
10,240
18
32
18
48
350
500
600
700
750,000
1,375,000
1,473,438
2,637,656
$ 350,000
525,000
383,568
731,887
300
287
299
'S?
electric ._ . .. ?,53
10 200 ^.54
18 720 '55
?M
13,440
12,000
430
100
33
36
40
44
69
25
40
16
4
14
12
14
36
?57
JSS
15 744 750
500
625
400
300
225
300
200
1.800,000
2,594,269
2,032,867
750,000
947, 755
821,486
300
295
•JSQ
16 224 ''60
_JU2Q0 '61
5 616 9fi9
13 600 800,000
33,600
200,000
43,480
320,000
535,000
875,000
400,000
250,000
75.000
373,558
127,000
247,856
250,000
300
168
''63
6,000
1,360
steam_-
steam
electric _
264
^65
4,368 247
238
300
966
2 928 '67
5,500
13,120
water
water
250
425
268
?7n
3 024 108 12 395,000
250,000
172,474
733,000
492,083
375,000
5,000,000
2,000,000
4,000,000
337,000
216,560
360,000
118,650
445,000
600,000
200,000
2,000,000
600,000
1,900,000
200,000
240
200
071
4,320 electric
steam and water
steam
steam
water
steam and electric
steam
steam
water
200
165
350
450
250
3,000
550
1,300
400
979
3,276 6
16
36
14
114
69
60
10
30
''73
8,448 974
14,052 975
6,656
65,520 1,600
880
300 276
977
13,104
35,840
CZ 8,81fi.
15,000
300
300
230
278
279
280
'SI
8 electric
electric _.
electric. _
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
15
331^
1,039^
7m
9911
1,155
720
100
400
1,800
225
600
250
5
75
282
550
325
650
300
770
65,000
3,020,000
1,010,720
852,991
1,419,131
1,246,164
1,690,429
40,000
292,700
696,457
503,207
665,497
753,631
619,117
400,000
9S9
300
275
271
2.57
257
257
'83
29,312
12,800
20,048
28,160
12,092
1,000
580
300
501
621
312
100
1,700
80
44
28
48
50
27
20
80
19
50
9
284
285
286
287
288
''89
16,350 9qo
46,000
8,500
steam and electric.
electric and steam
electric
electric
2,300,000 1,500,000 220 291
9q9
11,088 2,490,386
70,000
20,641
200,000
1,599,582
1,000,000
547,520
1,912,826
1,000,000
3,900,000
954,232
125,000
13,364
260,000
280
86
310
293
6,144 294
295
60
730
364
60
24
31
electric
electric •. _
electric
electric
electric
996
18,500 907
9,952
10,756
490,000
250,000
534,163
240,000
295
246
298
299
14,688 300
10,900 427
626
31
60
300
full time
301
30,240 electric 302
1-
h^
36 NoETH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2-
Mill Postoffice
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Class of Goods Manufactured
Aileen Mills, Inc _.
Rhyne-Anderson Mills Co.
Smithorman Cotton Mills.
County Moore Mills, Inc...
High Falls Mfg. Co. _.
Vass Cotton Mill Co
Rocky Mount Mills__
Biscoe ---
Troy
....do
Hemp
High Falls
Vass
Rocky Mount.
Bellwill Cotton Mills
Delgado Mills
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 4
Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 7
Bellc-^'ue Xig. Co
Eno Cotton Mills
Elizabeth City Cotton Mills,...
A. T. Baker & Co., Inc
Laura Cotton Mills
Roxboro Longhurst Cot. Mills.
Greenville Cotton Mills
Columbus Cotton Mills, Inc
Sapoiia Cotton Mills, Inc
Pennsylvania Textile Mills, Inc
Enterprise i'fg. Co
The Randolph Mills, Inc
Wilmington
...do
Carrboro
...do
Hillsboro
...do
Elizabeth City.
Roxboro
....do....
...do
Greenville
Columbus
Asheboro
Central Falls...
Coleridge
Franklinville...
Columbia VJg. Co
Deep River Mills, Inc
Leward Cotton Mills
Entwistle Yig. Co
Great Falls Mfg. Co
Hannah Pickett Mills, Inc..
Leak Kfg. Co
Leak, Wall & McRae, Inc..
Ledbetter Mfg. Co
Pee Dee Mfg. Co
Roberdel Mfg. Co....
Steele's Mills .
Jennings Cotton Mills, Inc..
Mansfield Mills, Inc
Ramseur
Randleman..
Worthville
Rockingham.
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
...do
Lumberton...
...do
National Cotton Mills, Inc
Cape Fear Cotton Mills Co....
Ernaldson Cotton Mills Co
The McEa'-hern Cot. Mills Co.
St. Pauls Cotton Mill Co
Draper American Mill
Wearwell Sheeting Mill
Wearwell Bedspread Mill
Edna Cotton Mills
Leaksville Cotton Mills
Lily Mill
Morehead Cotton Mills Co
Nantucket Mill
...do...
St. Pauls
...do
...do
St. Pauls
Rockingham.
Draper.
Leaksville
Reidsville
Spray
...do
...do
...do
Both
Spinning.
Both
Weaving.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Weaving.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Both
Bedspreads, sheeting, and yarn
Carded yarns
Cotton flannels _
Fancy rayon
Cotton yarn
Knitting yarns _
Yarn on skeins, tubes, cones, and
chain warp
Fancy dress ginghams and novelties..
Ginghams and art silk goods
2-ply yarns
Single yarns, combed and Carded
Shirtings and dress goods
Shirtings and rayon fabrics
Weaving yarns
Plushes, velvets, velours
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns.
Knitting and hosiery yarn
Yarns, single and ply
Hosiery yarn _
Cotton yarns
Carpet yarn
Sheetings, drills, bleached and tinted
flannels
Sheetings
Ginghams, plaids, and export fabrics.
Sheetings and drills
Print cloth
Khaki twills, fine fabrics
Cotton goods
Chambrays
Tickings.
Hard yarns
Plaids and shirtings
Heavy plaids and ginghams
Wide sheeting and print cloths
Cotton yarns
Hosiery and underwear yarns, sateens,.
broadcloth, plain and silk mixtures.
Colored cotton yarns
Yarns, fabrics, and draperies
Hosiery yarn
Yarns on cones and tubes
Yarns
Cotton blankets
Wide sheeting
Cotton and rayon bedspreads
Print cloths and twills
Yarns
Gingham and fine rayon fabrics
Yarn
Ginghams and rayon.
Cotton Mills 37
Continued.
Number
Looms
348
900
592
1,121
360
300
878
288
1,000
1,S
400
300
854
1,150
600
20
480
498
176
540
600
500
724
Number
Cards
16
13
100
16
46
46
43
34
77
28
15
198
58
10
43
39
11
38
30
78
42
74
36
Power
electric
water and steam,
electric.-
water. _.
electric-electric
steam
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
steam
electric
water and steam
electric
steam.. i
electric
electric, steam, and water.
electric
water and electric
electric, steam, and water.
water and steam
water and electric
steam and electric
electric
electric and steam
electric
electric
electric, steam, and water.
water
electric
electric and water
water and electric
steam
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric.
steam and electric,
water and steam...
electric
steam and water...
electric
Number
Horse-power
500
300
640
250
260
250
1,800
500
700
700
400
500
1,200
500
75
150
2,500
450
100
500
550
307
450
600
1,100
500
2,042
600
900
960
900
1,200
1,500
750
1,635
600
227
450
800
2,154
1,257
1,200
1,C00
450
718
400
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
1,000,000
690,000
1,432,722
175,000
564,212
710,000
4,500,000
522,145
850,000
824,706
1,421,243
1,020,000
1,630,000
1,056,725
1,040,000
436,849
5,433,216
1,200,000
1,438,000
750,000
1,428,500
893,385
2,114,073
1,500,000
2,868,300
5,000,000
1,054,677
2,923,456
2,165,653
238,000
2,807,000
545,667
1,755,376
786,211
2,018,695
4,440.000
4,339,561
2,684,700
1,275,000
602,797
620,800
1,400,000
1,049,263
Estimated
Yearly
Output
S 800,000
232.000
592,255
300,000
210.000
275,000
1,500,000
480,000
750,000
675,000
938.000
410.000
750.000
250,000
2,245,862
375,000
300,000
750,000
540,000
180,000
525,000
320,663
1,100,000
500,000
1,200.000
750,000
2,000,000
2.50,000
1,000,000
910,000
950,000
1,350,000
208.376
609.752
290,623
917,951
3.165.200
2,170.409
1.390,000
750.000
175.000
706.700
460.000
843.500
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
208
290
144
285
301
275
275
282
225
266
261
268
300
307
248
250
245
247
300
309
275
290
280
252
406
269
270
208
273
250
253
No.
303
304
.305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
38 NoETH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 2-
Mill Post office
Spinning
or
Weaving;
Spinning
and
Weaving
Class of Goods Manufactured
Rhode Island Mill
Spray Cotton Mills
China Grove Cotton Mills Co.
Patterson Mfg. Co
Corriher Mills Co _
Linn Mills Co
Barringer Mfg. Co -
Diamond Cotton Mills
Kesler Mfg. Co --
Klumac Cotton Mills, Inc
Marsh Cotton Mills, Inc.*
Rowan Cotton Mills Co
The Salisbury Cotton Mills...
Vance Cotton Mill..
The Henrietta Mills, Nos. 1-2.
Cliffside Mills
EUenboro Mfg. Co.f
Alexander Mfg. Co
The Florence Mills
The Cleghorn Mills Co
Grace Cotton Mill Co..
The Horn Co.... ---
The Spencer Mills Co
The Spindale Mills Co
Stonecutter Mills Co
Morgan Cotton Mills
Dickson Cotton Mills
Prince Cotton Mills.
Scotland Cotton Mills
Waverly Cotton Mills Co
Efird Mfg. Co
Wiscassett Mills Co
Norwood Mfg. Co
Oakboro Cotton Mill
Laurel Bluff Cotton Mills
Sapphire Cotton Mills
Marshville Mfg. Co
Icemorlee Cotton Mills, Inc...
Manetta Mills
Monroe Mills Co --.
Rodman-Heath Cotton Mills.
Harriette Cotton Mills.. _
Henderson Cotton Mills
Neuse Mfg. Co...
Caraleigh Mills Co
Consolidated Textile Corp
Raleigh Cotton Mill
Royall Cotton Mills... __.
Peck Mfg. Co
The Borden Mfg. Co -..
Ronda Cotton Mills*
Grier Cotton Mills
Yadkin Cotton Mills
Wilson Cotton Mills Co
Spray
...do
China Grove.
...do
Landis..
...do
Rockwell
Salisbury
...do.
...do
Both
Spinning.
Spinning,
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
...do.
....do -
...do...
...do...
Caroleen
Cliffside
EUenboro
Forest City
....do...
Rutherfordton
....do
Spindale
....do
....do
....do..
Laurel Hill
Laurinburg.
....do
....do
....do
Albemarle
....do
Norwood
Oakboro
Mount Airy
Brevard
Marshville
Monroe
.---do
..-.do...
Waxhaw
Henderson
....do..
Neuse
Raleigh
....do
....do
Wake Forest
Warrenton
Goldsboro
Ronda
North Wilkesboro.
Roaring River
Wilson
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Weaving
Both
Spinning.
Weaving.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Spinning-
Spinning.
Spinning.
Both
Both
Both
Both
Spinning.
Both
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Spinning.
Cotton blankets
Cotton yarns
Yarns
Sheetings
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns
Yarns
Yarns v
Sheetings
Damask, rayon, bedspreads, cotton
yarns
Combed knitting yarns
Cotton goods
Pajama checks, sheeting
Cotton prints and sheetings
Gingham
Yarns...
Bed sheeting, bed sheets, pillow cases.
Cotton outings
Combed yarns
Combed yarns
Bedspreads and rayons
Fine combed sateens
Fine combed yarns
Fine cotton and rayon mixture goods.
Yarns and fine fabrics
Hosiery yarn
Yarns
Yarn...
Yarns
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns
Cotton yarns
Fine combed yarn
12/2 for insulating
Combed cotton yarn
Cord tire fabrics.
Hosiery and underwear yarns
Cot t on bedspreads
Combed yarns.
Yarn
Yarns
Sheeting and yarns.
Chambrays
Ginghams and colored goods
Cotton goods
Cotton yarns
Sheetings and 20/2 yarns
Yarns
Underwear and hosiery yarns
Coarse hosiery yarns.
Soft twist yarns
Yarns
*Idle. tHave not started operation.
Cotton Mlljls 39
Continued.
Number
Looms
114
110
Number
Cards
653
200
1,789
1,524
284
536
32
150
504
504
4
194
132
216
520
500
Power
32
209
88
12
63
72
24
22
27
57
242
475
72
18
electric
steam and water.
electric
electric
electric
electric...-
electric
electric
electric
Number
Horse-power
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
WBter and electric
water, steam, and electric
electric
electric
electric
electric.
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric ....
electric
steam and electric
electric
electric
water
oil engine
electric
electric
electric
electric
steam
electric
electric
water and electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
electric
938
1,000
925
618
275
200
1,500
200
1,000
1,000
3,500
2,300
120
750
Approxi-mate
Amount
Raw
Material
Used,
Pounds
2,878.700
2,000,000
2,000,000
955,791
1,405,000
2,800,000
946,522
477
494
1,250,000
3,500,000
2,100,000
6,643,654
2,042,688
Estimated
Yearly
Output
$1,200,000'
850,000
420,000
532,000
1,500,000
500,000
600,000
1,7.50,000
1,561,258
936,192
380
900
725
600
250
500
1,700
4,057
1,500
200
100
400
250
850
212
300
2,015
1,667
500
550
750
3,307,500
4,413,197
816,618
961,316
250,000
547,557
924,406
770,000
2,000,000
1,250,393
2,100,782
753,874
1,365,889
4.800.000
11,000,000
3,000,000
143,431
200,000
1,000,000
4,000.000
945,531
360.000
2,000.000
5.250.000
516,000
746,098
724.389
1,439.650
1.880.160
930,000
2,500,000
1,468,705
1,750,000
447,457
454, 754
461,192
564,068
1,460.000
875,000
436,495
725,000
260,000
450,000
2,250,000
4,500,000
1,125,000
277,000
45,000
500,000
1,500,000
320,.501
100,000
3,500,000
2,000,000
200,000
470,000
3.33,398
541.683
818,738
300,000
750.000
Days in
Opera-tion
During
Year
256
247
300
241
285
285
532
286
255
200
245
300
240
240
272
283
256
275
272
278
276
266
290
302
250
250
206
211
173
268
248
263
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
steam and electric.
water
steam
220
200
300
1,291,936
1.030.000
640. 199
488,446
300,000
233.77?
full time
2
239
40 N'oRTH Carolina Industrial Statistics
Table No. 3—Mills, Number of Iloiif^
Mill Post office
Number Hours Worked
No.
Day Night Week
1 Aurora Cotton Mills 10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
10
10
55
•> Burlington Mills, Inc do 55
3 Elniira Cotton Mills do 55
* Glencoe Mills .. . . do 55
.S E. M. Holt Plaid Mills, Inc ....do 55
fi ... do . - -. --- .. .- 55
7 The Lakeside Mills --- do . . 10 55
8 Stevens Mfg. Co._ do 55
ft Consolidated Textile Corp. (Hopedale Div.)__
Consolidated Textile Corp. (Ossipee Div.)
Holt, Gant & Holt Cotton Mfg. Co
Glen Raven Cotton Mills
Elon College 55
in do 11
11 ....do.__ _
I'' 55
13 L. Banks Holt Mfg. Co
14 ._..do _ 55
15 Sidney Cotton Mills. __ ....do 55
Ifi Travora Mfg. Co., No. 1 ..._do
17 do ... 55
18 Holt-Granite Puritan Mill
If) Travora Mfg. Co., Plant No. 2 __ _. do 55
•^0 Durham Hosiery Mills, No. 15 55
'^1 55 w 10
12
12
'^7, 60
?4 Miller Mfg. Co ___.do _ 60
''.5 North State Cotton Mill Co ._..do... 60
•'fi Taylorsville Cotton MilL.. _ ....do 11
lOJ
10
12
lOi
60
?7 Vv'ade Mfg. Co ___ 58
•?8 Wadesboro Cotton Mill __ . ..do 60
9q 60
30 Asheville Cotton Mills Asheville _ _
--..do
do
10
10
10
55
31 French Broad Mill of Martel Mills, Inc ._.
Martel Mills, Inc. --
11
11
55
55
33
34 Henrv River Mfg Co 11
10
10
12 60
35 Blue Ridge Cotton Mill
Alpine Cotton Mills
Valdese Mfg. Co
Maiden-
Morganton
60
3fi 60
37 60
38 --..do 10
10
12
11
60
39
4n
Brown Mfg. Co
Cabarrus Cotton Millf
Concord
....do
55
41 ....do 10
10
11
10
10
11
lOJ
11
11
11
55
49 Franklin Cotton Mills ....do
43 Gibson Mfg. Co ....do 55
44 Hartsell Mills Co .. do 55
45 Hobarton Mfg. Co ... do
4fi Locke Cotton Mills Co . _ ... do - ... 55
47 ... do
48 Renfrew Mfg. Co.t ....do - ... 10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
55
4Q ....do
50 White-Parks Mill Co. ....do
51
52
Cabarrus Cotton Mills
Cannon Mfg. Co
Kannapolis
....do
55
55
*Started operation July, 1925. fBranch of Kannapolis. JBranch of parent company, Adams, Mass.
Cotton Mills 41
Worked, Wages, When Paid, Etc.
Employees
132
120
57
55
43
50
37
22
39
26
32
250
31
35
41
40
120
27
27
60
75
35
40
30
53
90
60
150
75
26
467
240
246
135
174
100
74
45
90
226
75
100
600
103
75
140
105
398
70
67
225
rrso
^ 107
97
250
125
550
210
254
254
Wages
Kfi,
S 5.02
7.27
5.45
7.63
5.45
10.00
6.54
5.50
7.27
4.50
4.50
8.00
4.50
7.09
6.00
5.50
7.15
6.00
3.81
6.36
5.72
6.36
7.26
4.57
5.50
7.60
3.33
7.50
4.36
6.18
5.63
O 03
1.90
1.81
2.72
2.10
2.18
2.50
2.72
1.50
1.20
2.05
2.15
2.20
2.50
2.36
2.15
2.50
1.83
2.15
2.18
2.10
2.19
1.99
1.98
2.20
1.27
2.16
1.50
2.00
2.51
2.00
2.00
•-'5 °
4.15
5.45
4.09
3.27
3.63
3.50
4.54
3.10
4.18
2.70
3.24
5.00
3.00
3.27
3.60
5.00
4.33
3.00
3.40
4.18
3.63
2.03
2.7
Object Description
Description
| Title | Report of the Department of Labor and Printing of the State of North Carolina |
| Creator | North Carolina. |
| Date | 1925; 1926 |
| Subjects |
Agricultural statistics Cotton--North Carolina Furniture industry and trade Genealogy Industries Labor laws and legislation--North Carolina--Periodicals Mine safety Mines and mineral resources--North Carolina--Periodicals North Carolina--Newspapers North Carolina. Department of Labor--Periodicals North Carolina--Economic conditions--Periodicals Textile industry Tobacco |
| Place | North Carolina |
| Time Period | (1900-1929) North Carolina's industrial revolution and World War One |
| Description | Report for 1926-1928 not issued. |
| Publisher | [Raleigh :The Dept.],1918-1930(Raleigh :Edwards & Broughton Printing Co., state printers). |
| Agency-Current |
N.C. Department of Labor |
| Rights | State Document see http://digital.ncdcr.gov/u?/p249901coll22,63754 |
| Physical Characteristics | 7 v. :ill. ;23 cm. |
| Collection | Health Sciences Library. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
| Type | text |
| Language | English |
| Format |
Annual reports Periodicals |
| Digital Characteristics-A | 24309 KB; 402 p. |
| Digital Collection | North Carolina Digital State Documents Collection |
| Digital Format | application/pdf |
| Title Replaced By | North Carolina. Department of Labor..Biennial report of the Department of Labor |
| Title Replaces | North Carolina. Department of Labor and Printing..Annual report of the Department of Labor and Printing of the State of North Carolina |
| Audience | All |
| Pres File Name-M | pubs_edp_reportdepartmentoflabor192526.pdf |
| Pres Local File Path-M | \Preservation_content\StatePubs\pubs_edp\images_master\ |
| Full Text |
7^ of rtje ®nibersiltp of iSortfj Carolina ^fjiis boofe toas; presienteti fap C33/ _ r 9 a T-b. UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 00033934654 FOR USE ONLY IN THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Ensuring Democracy through Digital Access (NC-LSTA) http://www.archive.org/details/reportofdept192526nort THIRTY-FIFTH REPORT OF THE Department of Labor and Printing OF THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA 19254926 FRANK D. GRIST, Commissioner (W«i£s««Sl> RALEIGH Mitchell Printing Company State Printers 1926 DEPARTMENT PEKSOXXEL, 1925-1926 Fkank D. Geist, Commissioner Caldwell County Miss Minnie Stamps Gosney, Secretary Wake County William F. George, Assistant Commissioner Cumberland County Pabks G. Hampton, Bookkeeper and stockman Yadkin County Elizabeth Gbeek, Senior Clerk Caldwell County Jerome C. Gobner, Warehouseman Granville County Employment Service Frank D. Grist, Federal Director Caldwell County Clarence Beddingfield, Assistant Federal Director Wake County Miss Kathebine Hamilton, Chief Clei-k Lee County L. R. Hones, 8upt., Asheville Employment Office Buncombe County Joseph M. Pratt, Supt., WiMston-Salevi Employment Office Forsyth County Geo. a. Younce, Supt., Greetishoro Employment Office Guilford County J. H. Cutheell, Supt.. Rocky Mount Employment Office Nash County Bellamy Harris, Supt., Wilmington Employment Office..'New Hanover County Bureau for the Deaf Hugh G. Miller, Chief Cleveland County Division of Service to World Wai- Veterans F. A. Hutchison, State Service Officer Guilford County 11 LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL To His Excellency, A. W. McLean, Governor of North Carolina. Sib:—Pursuant to Section 7311, Consolidated Statutes, 1919, I here-with transmit the Thirty-Fifth report of the Department of Labor and Printing, covering the biennial period 1925-1926. I present in statistical form information in regard to the industries of the State. From these figures one can get a conception of the won-derful progress that North Carolina has made during the biennial period and it is regretted that limited space and funds prevent going into greater detail in showing this progress. I feel that our industrial growth has, to a great measure, been due to the labor conditions that prevail throughout the Staite. From observation and information received as Commissioner of Labor and Printing, I am of the opinion that North Carolina is in the fortunate condition of having as near ideal relations existing between what is commonly called "capital and labor" as any State in the Union. The industrial plants and industrial communities of North Carolina are fast developing the "community spirit." Every industrial plant, of any size, now furnishes for its employees, community houses, swimming pools, playgrounds and various other forms of recreation and amuse-ments. Instructions are given by doctors and other trained professional men and women, to employees of the various plants, on health and liv-ing conditions. Interest is shown in the public schools adjacent to and in connection with the various industrial plants, by the owners and managers. In return for the many conveniences and recreations that are fur-nished the working man and his family, the employees have developed an appreciation of the conditions and there has arisen a spirit of cooperation that has very nearly eliminated industrial strife in North Carolina. A few minor industrial disruptions have been noted, in North Carolina, during the past two years and without legal authority, W I have made a quiet investigation into the cause of these few industrial ''f* iii -3 North Caeolina Industrial Statistics disturbances that have existed and it is my belief that ninety-five per cent of the unrest that has developed has been caused by agitators that have come in from sections beyond the borders of North Carolina. No legislation could forestall the coming of these agitators and the only way to counteract their influence is for the employer and employees to continue to develop the spirit of harmony and fellowship each work-ing for the best interest of the other, striving to improve the quantity and quality of production and living conditions. The public schools, good roads and other public improvements have all been most effective in establishing the friendly relations that now exist between the manufacturer and the working man. With the con-tinued progress of the State, the education of the working class and the cooperation of employer and employee, industrial strife in North Caro-lina Avill be completely eliminated in a short time. Also as required by law, I herein make such recommendations as in my opinion would serve to the best interest of the public and would in-crease the efficiency of this department. WORJvMEN^S compensation ACT North Carolina in the past two decades has made such rapid progress as an industrial State that it has come to be recognized throughout the nation and the world as being one of the greatest industrial sections of the universe. Scarcely is there a single article produced, by man or ma-chinery, that is not being produced in North Carolina. With a popu-lation of over two and one half millions, a large percent are now en-gaged in industrial work of some kind. Yearly the number of indus-trial workers increase but the State has failed, thus far, to provide ade-quate laws for the protection of this large percent of her population that is engaged in hazardous work. This is at variance with the progress that the State has made in other lines and is not consistent with the business standards of the State. Out of the forty-eight states of the Union there are now only six that do not have some form of the principle of the workman's compensation, and it is a source of regret that North Carolina is one of these states -^ Letter of Transmittal along with Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, Missouri and South Caro-lina. The fact that this form of settlement of accidents in industry has proven to be highly successful in forty-two states of the Union and in practically every foreign country of the world speaks for itself and I earnestly urge the enactment of a just workman's compensation law by the General Assembly of 1927. MINING For the calendar year 1925 there was produced in the State of N'orth Carolina approximately fifteen millions of dollars in mineral and other products of the mines. The law provides inspection of these mines by the Commissioner of Labor and Printing and I consider that this duty is one that should be performed by a technical expert or a competent mine engineer with at least five years' experience in underground mine operations. "We have operating in ll^orth Carolina, at the present time, two bitu-minous coal mines and many smaller mines producing iron ore, feld-spar, etc. There is a total of twenty-four minerals found in the State and these various minerals are found in forty-four different counties. While some of these mines are not in operation during the entire year I regard it as very essential that these mines should be inspected. Both of the coal mines in ISTorth Carolina have had explosions during the past two years. The Carolina Coal Company Mine, at Sanford, E. F. D. exploded on May 27th, 1925, and resulted in the death of fifty-three men and the injury of two. The explosion of the Erskin-Eam-say Coal Company, at Cumnock, IST. C, was on November 24th, 1926, and resulted in the death of two men and the injury of two. The latter explosion was slight but the former at the Carolina Coal Company Mine resulted in the death of every man under ground and completely wrecked the mine for several weeks. I do not undertake to argue that proper and adequate mine inspection would have prevented these two explosions but it would have given this department an opportunity to have had greater knowledge of the condi-tions of these mines if proper periodical inspection had been made by a competent and efficient mine inspector. Also the State of North vi !N'oKTH Carolina Industrial Statistics Carolina could have presented the mining industry in this State with a clearer conscience i£ everything in its power had been done to safe-guard the workmen in the mines. There are dangers to both life and property in all of the mines and quarries operating in JSTorth Carolina. Too often a disaster can be caused by defective machinery or falling parts of rocks or other mate-rial striking a workman. There is an inadequate practice of safety and precaution in the mining industry. Therefore, I earnestly recommend the enactment of legislation for the creation of a competent mine in-spector in the Department of Labor and Printing. Respectfully submitted, F. D. Grist, Commissioner. Raleigh, lii. C, December 15, 1926. CONTENTS Chapter I Cotton, "Woolen, Silk and Cokdage Mills II — Knitting Mills III Furniture Factories IV Tobacco Manufactures V Miscellaneous Industries VI Mines and Mining VII The Power Situation in N'orth Carolina. VIII Farm akd Farm Labor IX Public Employment Service Bureau of Labor for the Deaf X ^Division of Service to World War Veterans XI l^EWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS XII State Printing Appendix—Classification of Industries Vll ABUNDANT AMERICAN LABOR SOUTH'S GREAT ASSET STAUNCH, INTELLIGENT AND SKILLED CHARACTER OF THE CON-TENTED AND PROSPEROUS ANGLO-SAXON MILL OPERATIVES OF THE SOUTH IMPORTANT FACTOR IN RAPID EXPANSION OF SOUTHERN TEXTILE INDUSTRY By Wade H. Harris, Editor, Charlotte Observer. The following article appeared iii the Manufacturers Record under date of October 28, 1926, and is reprinted here by courtesy of the Manufac-turers Record, Baltimore, Md. Northern and New England Textile men continue coming South to invest their capital. These mill men bring their money, but they do not bring their labor. In fact, the impelling motive is to get away from that labor and to leave it behind, for it is the established superiority of Southern mill help that develops one of the South's most potent advantages in the field of industry. The climate, as a matter of course, is a great asset, for the mechanical humidifier is of but small necessity ; nearness to the raw supply is another factor ; healthier living and cheaper living is yet another, but the staunch, intelligent and skilled character of Southern Anglo-Saxon mill help is the factor that makes the strongest appeal to the average outsider looking for investment in the South. Back of all these advantages of proximity to the cotton fields, of abun-dance of native labor, of climate and of healthy and happy domestic conditions is the paramount factor of cheap and abundant electric power. It was the construction of transmission lines through all cotton sections of the South that gave the textile industry its first great impetus and which is responsible for the continuing multiplication of spindles and looms in the South. Devel-opment of water-power resources is keeping just a little ahead of the devel-oping demands by industry, and, like the supply of labor, the supply of electrical energy iin the South seems to have no limit. Cheap electric power will always play an important part in promotion of Southern industry. Tlie Northern and New England men coming South likewise manifest a preference for mill plants already built and in operation, as witness the recent purchase by New York interests of such important manufacturing plants as the Caroleen, the Henrietta and the Cherokee Falls. They have not only saved the trouble of building and equipping mills, but come into possession of factories already manned with competent labor, a class of labor that aside from being intelligent and capable, is willing and endowed with the very desirable qualifications of loyalty. The new investors show keenness in seeking out the centers from which this native help is drawn. They find good opportunities in the Piedmont districts of both North Carolina and South Carolina, and investments have been particularly active in the vicinity of Charlotte, Gastonia, Greenville and Spartanburg, while there has been a distinct movement from the Piedmont farther into the heart of the native V NoRTTH Carolina Industrial Statistics labor, an indication of wliich is found in the drift toward Hendersonville, Swannanoa, Black Mountain and Asheville sections, where new mills have been built and purchased mills added to. The textile industry is gaining impetus in the mountain districts and largely by reason of the abundance of native labor available. There is no exhaustion of this supply, for the Piedmont and mountain sections are pop-ulated with the families of the Rooseveltian characteristics. The prospects is that no matter to what extent the industrial South is developed, there need be no fear on the score of exhaustion of native labor to man the fac-tories. One factor in reliability of this labor supply is that industrial life in the South is happy and contented, healthy and prosperous, the conditions under which Southern labor lives being quite the opposite of tenement life in the North and East. It is out of doors for the Southern mill worker. The mill towns are model villages, except in the few isolated particulars, where old-estabUshed mill settlements have not been renovated. But every mill village built and populated in recent years is a village laid out after what might be accepted as modern city planning. Paved streets are the first consider-ation ; water-works and sewerage come next. Then there is the flower garden in front and the vegetable garden behind the home and the garage alongside. Inside there are rugs and carpets, radios, pianolas, telephones, electric lights, bath rooms, and, in fact, "all the conveniences of the city home." There are schoolhouses of modern type—in architecture some of the cotton-mill school-houses are a little ahead in architecture and equipment of the city buildings —they have churches, hospitals, gymnasiums, playgrounds, trained nurses and doctors, the latter provided by the mill owners. In short, the cotton-mill operatives in the South live amidst the best surroundings that medical science can devise and in all the comforts that money can provide, for it is the human element that dominates the Southern textile industry, and which is the promotive concern of the mill owners themselves, largely organized under the name of the American Cotton Manufacturers Association. For this organization Stuart W. Cramer is a representative spokesman, and we can do no better than draw on his picture of life as lived in the Southern mill community. The mill village, he explained in an address before a meeting of the association last year, is generally located outside the corporate limits of any municipality and often in the country, therefore self-contained and self-supporting, with its own store buildings, schools, churches and public utilities, with its dwellings clustered around the mill buildings and all owned by the mill company as a whole or in large part. The schools are under the direction of the county boards of education ; wages are paid weekly in cash ; the stores are generally owned and conducted by outsiders ; the churches are directed by the regular church organizations, and the community activities are more and more those of the people themselves, with a small negro population living in the outskirts or in some segregated district. And here comes in an important feature bearing on the relative wage scale in New England and the South. In these mill villages we have described Abundant American Labob South's Great Asset the average charge, as Mr. Cramer says, is 25 cents a room per week. This includes electric lights, water and sewerage, and is not even enough to keep the houses painted and in repair, and that small amount is more than offset by village and welfare expense, so that it is really not only a totally unpro-ductive investment but a losing one. It has been demonstrated that this free-rent equivalent and general village and welfare expense amounts to $4.36 per operative per week, which is another way of saying that the Southern mill operative enjoys an advantage of $4.36 per week over the representative Northern mill operative, who usually lives in a city and has to pay out of his wages an amount equal to that sum for the things his Southern brother gets free. Now, that statement brings on more talk, for it is really not a gift; on the contrary, one of the topics under very serious consideration by the American Cotton Manufacturers Association is how best to handle that matter, which is, after all, but a bookkeeping transaction, that the employes will not only realize that it is a real item in their compensation, that it is really a part of their pay, and also that the public generally may realize that Southern cotton-mill workers are not so poorly paid as appears on the surface. All this is recognized by the National Industrial Conference Board, which now appends to its regular published wage comparisons the following foot-note "The wage data given are for cash payments only and do not take into consideration the value of such wage equivalents as reduced or free house rent or other special services rendered by the companies to employes. Various forms of wage equivalents are in use in industrial establishments in many localities, and they are almost universal in the Southern cotton-mill districts, but the part which these play as compensation for work performed cannot be taken into account in a study of this character." We have mentioned the garage alongside the house, for the average cotton-mill worker in the South does not have all his recreation at home. He has an automobile for him'self and family, just as surely as he has a cow and a few pigs. The automobile necessarily figiires in Southern mill community life, for, and it is the observation of Mr. Cramer, that even the most casual of visitors to a mill community in this section must be impressed with the amazing number of automobiles of all "vintages" in sight. The auto plays an important part in the life of the operatives, for, to resume Mr. Cramer's narrative, the mills close down on Saturday forenoons at 11 o'clock and by early afternoon large numbers of workers are out for the week-ends even as their former envied society neighbors. The educational value of all this commingling of people over large areas is incalculable and contributes greatly to their health and contentment ; no longer can agitators mislead them, for it is too easy to go, see and check up, and few employers can shirk their respon-sibilities, for the most desirable workers easily find work and surroundings to their liking. One curious fact well worth noting is the number of work-men who come to their work in automobiles, particularly those who come in from the contiguous country for miles around during slack seasons on the farms, and often country produce is brought to market at the same time. The effect of this influence on industry, both farming and manu-facturing is obviously far-reaching and gives promise of being at least in xii North Cakolina Industrial Statistics part a solution of the housing and home problems. "It is noteworthy" Mr. Cramer submits by way of side remark, "that this great result is being achieved by industrialists along sound economic lines rather than by legisla-tion invoked by academicians—the rankest and most insidiously dangerous kind of paternalism." If it might be charged that we are playing up the Southern mill men too much in the light of benefactors—and they are that in fact—it might be explained that back of all this consideration they give to the welfare of their help is a patriotic interest in the child of today, which, as Mr. Cramer says, is regarded as the hope of Southern industrialism of tomorrow. The sentiment of the Southern cotton-mill owner i.s reflected in the statement that "the health, training and opportunities we bring to the children of today will largely determine whether they will care to be the mill workers of tomorrow." Any Southern mill man, therefore, who fails to support child-welfare work and to observe such child-labor restrictions as have survived the chaos of experimen-tation, both legislative and industrial, whether compelled to do so by law or not, "is a traitor to his industry and to his own selfish Interests." Back of the Anglo-Saxon mill help of the South stands a yet more important factor, one who is accustomed to get much more of misplaced blame than of well-deserved praise. It is the Anglo-Saxon mill man, and this is his picture : "The average Southern mill man usually starts small, often has come up from the ranks, succeeds in a small way and gradually works up to an income that provides the usual necessities and luxuries of life ; his success from that point on means only more income to be reinvested by enlargiing his plant, added responsibilities and worries and no more necessities nor luxuries." Here, then, comes in the cardinal principle of the Southern mill man : He sees that he can best add to his own happinass and peace with the world "by investing more and more of his own excess income in the health and happiness of his fellow-men" this fellowship being constituted of the i)eople who daily surround him as helpers and associates, and who draw his weekly payroll. Such are the outstanding characteristics of the Southern cotton-mill work-ers, the Southern cotton-mill owners and the domestic environments of life in the Southern cotton-mill community. CHAPTER I COTTON MILLS North Carolina leads the nation as the greatest cotton goods manu-facturing State. There has been a substantial and permanent growth in the industry during the past ten years but it is only during the last two years that the State has taken first place in the manufacturing of textile goods. The leading products of the mills are denims, canton flannels, flannelettes, towels and toweling, cotton table damask, sheets and sheetings, pillow cases, commercial yarns and ginghams. The growth in the textile industry during the past ten years has been very rapid but during the past two years, when the industry seemed to be more on a decline in other states, North Carolina has gone forward in a rapid manner. Statistics show that the State now has 6,075,168 spindles in place which is 156,630 more than were employed in 1924. The number of active spindle hours for 1926 were 19,952,947,406 while in 1924 they were 17,332,650,667. The actual number of spindles placed in the mills of Massachusetts exceed those of North Carolina by a little over five million being 11,417,406 but the number of spindle hours were only 17,938,121,787. This gives to North Carolina 1,014,825,619 more active spindle hours than any other one State. Some of the mills have been consolidated and a few of them have ceased to operate during the past two years but new ones have been established and the total number of mills in the State today is larger than it was at the close of the last biennial period. North Carolina with four hundred and six mills has more active mills than any other State. Table number one shoAvs a list of the mills by counties, Gaston County, with 1,116,760 spindles and eighty-eight mills leads the State as the greatest textile county. Of the seventy-three counties in the United States that employ over 100,000 spindles twenty-one of these counties are in North Carolina. It is to be regretted that some of the mills failed to report certain items but of the four hundred and six mills that are now in this State three hundred and forty reported a capital stock of $196,515,585. North Carolina Industrial Statistics The number of looms used in the industry is 102,529 and the num-ber of cards 16,336. During the year 1916 there were only 62,918 looms and 9,806 cards showing an increase during the period of ten years of 62% in the looms and 66% in the use of cards. There are 641,100,442 pounds of raw material used annually in the mills of the State. Three hundred and forty-five of the mills report the estimated value of the yearly output to be $303,799,410. There are now 49,792 men working in the mills, 30,582 women and 3,144 children. The first two figures indicate an increase during the biennial period while the latter shows a decrease. The children em-ployed in the mills are between the ages of fourteen and sixteen years of age. The average high wage paid males is now $5.71 and the low average is $2.12, these figures show an increase. The high average wage paid females is $3.08 and the low average is $1.88 the former being a decrease and the latter an increase. In 1924 at the close of the biennial period, the average maximum wage for the males was $5.20 and the low average was $2.00; for the females the high average was $3.25 and the low average was $1.30. In 1916 the average high wages for the males was $3.05 and the low average was 97c, while the high average for the females was $1.50 and the low average was 85c. The mills of Worth Carolina are owned, for the most part, by North Carolinians and are operated, to a large extent by native labor. Suf-ficient labor is generally to be found within the State and is available to the extent needed. The ideal climatic conditions of the State, the splendid water power and the nearest to the source of supply of raw material all combine to make this the leading textile State. The aver-age working day is ten hours and the majority of the mills run full time, some operating both night and day. During the last few months operations have been on a more reduced basis and in some instances running time has been reduced to four and five days a week but the feeling is optimistic and a material improvement is expected during the coming months when price at which the new cotton may be pur-chased is determined. Cotton Mllls The mills reporting on the amount of horse power used show a total of 69,657 units. Two hundred eighty-three mills use electric power, twenty-nine use steam and electric; twenty-one use steam; fourteen use steam and water ; fifteen use electric and water ; seven use steam ; water and electric; sixteen use water, three report the use of hydro-electric power and three use oil to generate their power. Fifteen of the mills failed to report on this particular item. Statistical data relating to various details of the industry will be found in the tabulations following: ISToKTH Carolina Industrial Statistics C5 »—coCOoy—D—oHcDo-ofcCnl»-*oco^—looO-'f^ cofM'-'Oor-cococo-H-^cs 0o0»tc^-»HOC'^MiCc0o'oMuo^oCrO^Co^oOciOC'T—> MCOOO-*—'lOCO^i— — 'Tf -r (M — s o t s to t-^rX<5M0'^*-c*O-(-r-i!ar:oocc^ojctoocco^(oNo CSOOO — -J^ — tCCriOJOOtC ^osoooS^co':o^oiS ^ ^' ^ cq ^ O! CO U5 r^(M»r505'*0»OCOrt |
| OCLC Number-Original | 12426716 |
Tags
Add tags for Report of the Department of Labor and Printing of the State of North Carolina
Comments
Post a Comment for Report of the Department of Labor and Printing of the State of North Carolina
