Bobbin and Shuttle First Issue

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Southwide Textile Heritage Initiative

Preserving the History & Heritage of the
Southern Cotton Mill People

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                            January 6, 2005

COOLEEMEE, NC—A new publication preserving a critical piece of history made its public debut this month. The magazine-format "Bobbin & Shuttle" includes over a score of feature articles by mill town authors, portraying the ordinary and extraordinary lives of those who tended machines but also built strong families, packed churches and unique neighborhoods.

The magazine’s birth is part of a Southwide Textile Heritage Initiative launched in July 2004 by a coalition of mill village historians, town officials, museums and others who felt an urgent need to collect and preserve mill town stories before they vanish. They are now organizing for a regional "Cotton Mill Reunion & Convention" in Kannapolis, NC on April 22-23, 2005.

Since both humor and hard work characterized mill village life, the publication’s many stories reflect that range of attitudes, sentiments and values that got mill people through both good and bad times.

Within its color cover are 64 pages of photos and stories about mill town Christmas parades, weaver’s tools, iron skillets, "outlaw" baseball and the many uses for Karo buckets. Some authors grew up in the 1950s while others lived through the Great Depress.

Factual histories examine topics like "Did Mill Families Make Economic Progress?" and the trek from farm to factory in North Georgia. "The Promise" is a firsthand account by lifelong textile man, Charles Terrell Freeman, who at age eight went to work spinning in 1898. After his death, Freeman’s handwritten words from a small notebook were lovingly transcribed by his great nephew.

Also highlighted are a number of current efforts to preserve the South’s cotton mill heritage—from the Carolinas to Tennessee—including documentary filmmaking, projects that save old mills and cherished public buildings, work by creative artists and local history groups that proudly teach mill history to elementary school students or work to digitize old photo collections.

"We promised members of the Order of the Bobbin & Shuttle a keepsake memories booklet," says editor Lynn Rumley. The "Order" is an honorary group whose members’ dues contribute to the Initiative. "And it just turned into a magazine. We had much more material than we could print, so I hope this won’t be the last issue." Rumley directs the Textile Heritage Center at Cooleemee and coordinates the Initiative.

Greensboro native Paul Sams took on the job of raising donations for the first issue. He grew up in one of the Cone Mill villages there and last year he organized a mill-school reunion that drew over 600 people. Cone, now part of the International Textile Group, underwrote some of the magazines costs as did Jewel Industries of Winston-Salem, Early Bird Hosiery Mills of Hickory, Knit-Wear Fabrics of Burlington, the Cone American Legion Post and many others. Rumley hopes other corporate and mill town sponsorships will underwrite future editions now that a first issue is in hand.

Now, the group wants to get the magazine into the hands of as many cotton mill people as possible. The magazine is available by mail with a donation of at least $3 plus $2 s/h. Bulk orders of the magazine are available at a discount.

"As we hit the road, it’s our dream that every little small town convenience store will be getting them out. It’s up to us to make sure the cotton mill people get their place of honor in the history books," says Rumley. "Who better can tell this story than the people who lived it?"

To place an order by mail write: Textile Heritage, PO Box 667, Cooleemee, NC 27014. Your may also request information about the 2005 Cotton Mill Reunion & Convention" or visit www.textileheritage.org. or call (336) 284-6040.