Women in Mill Villages
--by Mary Frederickson
In the late-nineteenth century a manufacturing
boom hit North Carolina, and hundreds of cotton mills were built throughout
the state. As new mills opened, many jobs became available for women and
children who were the family members most easily spared from agricultural
work. Soon thousands of women, both single and married, moved from farms
into the newly built villages that surrounded the mills. As mill work became
more common and farming increasingly difficult for North Carolinians, more
men came to mill villages as well, to join their families or to find jobs
themselves. Nevertheless, in many mills the majority of the work force
continued to be made up of women who had moved into mill villages with
promises of steady work, cash wages, and hopes of being able to send their
children to school.
Adjusting to life in mill villages was
not easy. Work hours were long, and the jobs were difficult. Many villages
lacked schools. Women reared on farms found it took time to get used to
beginning work when a bell rang. Running machinery indoors and working
the night shift also seemed strange and unsettling. But gradually women
made friends, enjoyed living closer to relatives, and joined together to
open schools and churches.
Because women employees became important
to cotton manufacturers, some mill owners provided special benefits for
women. Before 1900 women who lived in a mill village might receive permission
to leave work a little early to prepare dinners for their families or to
nurse babies left in the care of relatives. A few villages ran day nurseries
for babies and toddlers, and others had family health clinics. Before 1918
children were expected to go to work in the mill after they finished the
sixth or seventh grade. Some left school even earlier to help their mothers
in the mill. Most women did not want their children to work in the mill,
but they felt better when they could keep an eye on their own boys and
girls.

Women labored very hard in cotton mills
as spinners or weavers. They often left their homes at 6:00 A.M. to begin
the twelve-hour day shift. They left home at 6:00 P.M. if they worked on
the night shift. Mill families in North Carolina in the early twentieth
century remained large, usually with six or seven children. A family often
had three or four family members working in the mill at the same time.
Single women employed in the mill usually lived with their families and
contributed their wages to the family budget. Married women hired by the
mill who had large families worked doubly hard. Most of these women depended
on an older relative—an aunt, mother, or grandmother—for help with child
care and housekeeping. Before the 1960s most North Carolina mill employees
were white. White women in mill villages sometimes relied on black women
who lived nearby to help with domestic chores like child care, cooking,
and laundering in return for a small payment in cash.
For many North Carolina women, life in
a mill village brought more pleasure than living in the country and farming.
Some mill families settled into a village and stayed for two or three generations.
Other left after a few weeks, moving on to another village where the wages
might be slightly higher or the working or living conditions better. As
North Carolina mill villages became established communities, women who
did not work in the mill ran boardinghouses or worked as midwives and teachers.
When older women retired from mill work they tended gardens, quilted, fished,
visited, and worked with the church.
Women held the majority
of jobs in textile mills. They performed the tasks that required prolonged
concentration and manual dexterity, Gastonia, 1939.
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During World War I mill work
became more fast-paced. Children were no longer hired as workers or allowed
to assist their mothers as “helpers.” Work demands by mill companies also
increased. Those who could not keep up lost their jobs. In the 1920s and
1930s many North Carolina women and men worked to improve conditions in
mill villages throughout the state by joining textile unions or by striking
to protest substandard wages and inadequate living conditions.
After World War II employment in North
Carolina mills improved as wages increased and the eight-hour day replaced
ten- or twelve-hour shifts. During the 1940s mill owners began to sell
mill houses to the workers. Women enjoyed becoming homeowners, but some
were sad to see the villages disbanded. After 1965 both black and white
women found employment in textile manufacturing throughout the South. Today,
although the number of textile workers in North Carolina has declined and
most of the mill villages are gone, women workers still make up the majority
of the work force in mills across the state. |
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