Milling Around Greenville, South Carolina

The Making of a Chimney & Mill Town

Milling Around Greenville, South Carolina

Greenville, South Carolina 29617, United States

Created By: Brandon Inabinet

Tour Information

Introduction: This tour, composed by Communication Studies students at Furman University, uses the voice of Bennette Geer, a textile executive and one of the Presidents of Furman University from 1933 to 1938.

Step back in time with me--I'm Bennette Geer, and I've led a very interesting life! I had always wanted to be a college professor, and pursued that pathway through degrees and teaching through my 30s. But when my brother unexpectedly died at a young age, I ended up taking over all of his businesses in the textile mill industry.

That combined interest, of higher education and industry, put me into conversation with somebody who became a very close friend--James B. Duke! Managing my brothers' mills, starting my own, serving as the President of the American Cotton Manufacturers Association in 1930, and then going on to be President of Furman University has led to a very full and active life!

As I'll tell more about at the Judson Mill stop, the disagreements between mill owners and workers was tough. On the one hand, we owners dreamed of bringing success to these little places we called home, like the business tycoons Carnegie, Vanderbilt, Rockefeller, and my friend Duke had done. As a college professor myself, my dream was to eradicate poor health, civil unrest, and illiteracy from the "mountain city" we call home.

On the other hand, we never had that much success to become magnate-philanthropists, and for ourselves to live comfortably (some would say too comfortably), we often saw our workers barely getting by. Strikes and walkouts were common; in response, we mill owners were quick to shut down, hire security to keep workers in line, and get insiders in the community to report any talk of strikes or disagreement to us. In the little "planned communities" of the mills, we mill owners had complete control--we owned the store (which also operated as the bank), the church, the school, the houses, and everything.

I look forward to showing you around the town I love, and the mill crescent I helped form! Oh, and one more thing, if you'd like to step back in time with me further, consider taking the tour on your bicycle! Some of these mills are gated or difficult to reach by car, but a bicycle will get you right up to the towering bricks.


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What You'll See on the Tour

The old “Governor’s Hill” area is now home to one of Greenville's northernmost mills. This area got its name because of B.F. Perry's house (Perry was our Governoor in South Carolina during Reconstrution. The mill was created by Fran... Read more
Sampson Mill has been around quite a long time. Oscar Sampson opened his first Sampson Mill in 1865 just after the end of the Civil War using a 35-year-old equipment, a steam engine from Newberry, and $60,000.  Sampson partnered with Jam... Read more
This is one of the most robust and successful mills in the upstate. Constructed in 1902, this mill has a history that is downright cheery, especially compared with some of the area’s other mills. John Arrington, the mill’s owner for m... Read more
Lewis Wardlaw Parker and Thomas Fleming Parker founded Monaghan Mill in 1900, three years later than Poe Mill. For the Parker cousins, the ideal mill village would be named for their grandfather's hometown in Ireland. The name was also f... Read more
Woodside was the largest cotton mill under one roof in the United States and the largest single mill building in the world. It put Greenville on the national map! Founded by John T. Woodside in 1902, one of several other mills around the U... Read more
Built in 1901, Stephen Greene, the president of the New England architectural firm, mentioned Brandon Mill as "one of the prettiest cotton mill settlements in the state." With the unique design, Brandon Mill soon became the exemplar of the... Read more
Note: Written from the point of view of Bennette Geer, famous mill owner who became Furman University President. In March of 1912, J. Irving Westervelt opened this sprawling mill in West Greenville--the largest in the world on thirty-six a... Read more
Here at 30 Emery Street stands the once booming Dunean Mill. In its heyday the Dunean Mill housed over 50,000 spindles, employed hundreds, and included four hundred and fifty homes. The Mill was opened in 1911 but began operating at full... Read more
This charming building at the corner of Guess Street and Mills Avenue hides a dark history. This mill was founded in the 1890s by Captain Otis Prentiss Mills with the help of his son-in-law Walter Moore. Construction of the brick building b... Read more
No tour of the mills of Greenville would be complete without coming to the Reedy Falls. Greenville was a small city in the mid 1800s, with its railroad stops, good water from this river, the academies for boys and girls, and Furman Universi... Read more

 

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