Allenbrook: Civil War-Era Plantation Home


Fulton County, 1901-1903. Construction on the Morgan Falls Dam located 12 miles north of Atlanta on the Chattahoochee River



Download 5.13 Mb.
Page4/6
Date17.11.2017
Size5.13 Mb.
#34099
1   2   3   4   5   6

Fulton County, 1901-1903. Construction on the Morgan Falls Dam located 12 miles north of Atlanta on the Chattahoochee River

Vanishing Georgia Collection, Image Ful556





Fulton County, 1930s-1940s. Morgan Falls Dam located twelve miles north of Atlanta

on the Chattahoochee River
Vanishing Georgia Collection, Image Ful0471

Roswell Manufacturing Company: Textile Production

The production of cotton and the development of the United States are firmly intertwined.

Dramatic differences in climate and soil quality led to the evolution of two distinctly separate economies, both largely based on the production and finishing of cotton, during the 73-year period between the establishment of the United States in 1788 and the outbreak of Civil War in 1861.
The Southern states typically employed a system of plantation farming and chattel-slavery in the production of cotton. The raw material was then transported either by rail or riverboat to a seaport where it was then shipped to a finishing facility in New England or Europe.

Northern mills were often patterned after a system first developed by Samuel Slater, a New England mill owner. Slater’s system allowed for an entire family, including children, to be employed. In exchange, the family received a house near the mill for the duration of their employment. Though the cotton was grown in Southern states, it was relatively rare for it to be processed into a finished good in a location other than New England or Europe.




Roswell King

Textile Mills in Roswell, Georgia
Roswell King was born in Windsor, Connecticut in 1765. As a young man, King moved to Darien, Georgia where he worked as an overseer and manager for a large plantation owned by Major Pierce Butler, a resident of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In that capacity, King expanded his business dealings to include the brokering of cotton, rice, and lumber. He also worked as a justice of the peace, served in the local militia, and was elected as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives. In 1792, King married Catherine Barrington, of Darien. They had nine children.

In 1839, at the advanced age of 74, King visited an area west of

modern-day Atlanta (Cobb and Fulton Counties). He saw potential in the abundance of water resources fed by the river and the surrounding creeks and began to buy property along the Chattahoochee and a main tributary now known as Vickery Creek. King’s original mill site would eventually extend to several that processed wool and cotton goods. A mill town, along the same model as that often used in King’s native New England, would also develop in that location. In his honor, the town would come to be called “Roswell”. In addition to several of his children, King persuaded many of his wealthy friends from coastal Georgia to relocate to the area and a thriving town began to emerge. Following Roswell’s death in 1844, his son, Barrington King, assumed ownership and management of the mills.

In 1840, nineteen textile mills were in production in Georgia. By 1851 that number had doubled to thirty-eight. In the decade leading up to the Civil War, the mill labor force in Georgia solidified as mainly Caucasian and was composed of highly-skilled workers from the rural areas immediately surrounding the factories. The largest textile mill center in North Georgia was located in Roswell.




Sherman’s March Through Georgia
The American Civil War erupted in 1861. Over the next three years, the Confederate States of America (of which Georgia was a member) fought to shield their major cities and resources from a numerically superior Northern force. White males left their positions as textile workers and joined the Confederate Army. Eventually, in the mills that remained in operation throughout the war, the labor force shifted to females, children, and men too old or too young to actively fight. This was also true in the Roswell, Georgia mills as the invading forces of William T. Sherman advanced towards the city of Atlanta following the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain during the summer of 1864. At the Roswell mills, a workforce of approximately 400 women and a few men and boys produced cloth for Confederate uniforms and blankets.

Kennesaw Mountain was captured on June 27, and the nearby town of Marietta was occupied on July 3. From this operational base, General Sherman utilized the established railroad lines and small town to prepare for a large-scale assault on Atlanta. Sherman deployed patrols to the left and right along the banks of the Chattahoochee, looking for a position from which he could most effectively transport his force of approximately 115,000 men across. At the time, Atlanta was garrisoned with approximately 65,000 Confederate troops and was a highly important military arsenal and railroad distribution hub for the Southern war effort.


The village of Roswell, ten miles east of Marietta and on the Western bank of the Chattahoochee, lay in the direct path of Sherman’s forces. On July 5, 1864, Brigadier General Kennar Garrard moved his cavalry into Roswell and began a 12-day occupation of the town. When Garrard’s forces arrived, he found about 400 women, their children (around 300), and a few men working at the Ivy and Laurel Mills. The other residents of Roswell had abandoned the town as the Union forces advanced.

On direct command of General Sherman, the experienced laborers were removed from the area so that they could not continue to assist in the war effort. Approximately 700 persons, workers at the mills and their children, were temporarily housed on the Georgia Military Institute campus in Marietta. By July 15, two trains of prisoners were transported North towards Chattanooga and from there to the vicinity of the Ohio River, a distance of approximately 400 miles. Their preparation for the relocation was 9 days’ rations, the belongings that they could personally carry, and their children. Once at their destination, these refugees were deposited and became new residents of the river towns on the respective Indiana and Kentucky banks of the Ohio.



While the individual names and fates of these displaced Georgians are unknown, it can be supposed that these women were forced to take whatever jobs they could locate in order to support themselves and their children in their new hostile surroundings. Very few of them ever made their way back to Georgia. In July 2000, the Roswell Mills Camp #1547 Sons of Confederate Veterans and the City of Roswell erected a monument to these refugees on Factory Hill in the old Roswell Manufacturing mill village. Following the Civil War, the Roswell Mills were re-established and operated in various capacities until they were eventually closed in 1975.



Download 5.13 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page