Filled with historical detail and personal insight, this memoir
re-creates the world of textile workers in Bladenboro, North
Carolina, during two decades of depression and war.
Baseball, religion, work, death, and the company store -- these
figured eminently in the lives of Southern cotton mill workers and
their families during the early decades of the twentieth century.
In this firsthand account of his native Bladenboro, George G.
Suggs, Jr., captures in rich detail the world of a thriving cotton
mill town where the company was dominant but the workers had forged
a strong community. Here the focus is on the workers -- their
interests, personalities, and values -- in their best and in their
darker moments. Ultimately we see the many dimensions of
working-class culture and taste a way of life that has
vanished.
Drawing upon childhood memories and his father's recollections,
Suggs covers events in Bladenboro during the 1930s and '40s. He
describes the nature of cotton mill work, the stresses and strains
produced by undesirable working conditions, and the various ways in
which workers and their families learned to cope. Many characters
emerge from this story -- from the kind woman who dispensed the
company fiat money to the desperate men who would gamble it away.
The book explores key topics such as social rankings, medical care,
the company store, and workers' responses to death. Above all, we
see how faith found expression on the job and in the surrounding
evangelical churches. The workers of Bladenboro are gone, and
little remains of the mills, but this work pays tribute to lives
well lived under the most challenging circumstances.
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