Creating the Modern South Creating the Modern South

Creating the Modern South

Millhands and Managers in Dalton, Georgia, 1884-1984

    • $29.99
    • $29.99

Publisher Description

Built by local entrepreneurs during Dixie's Cotton Mill in Dalton, Georgia, acted as a magnet for thousands of newly impoverished white farm families who moved to the factory and its company-owned village from the surrounding countryside. In Creating the Modern South, Douglas Flamming examines one hundred years in the life of the mill and the town, providing a uniquely perceptive view of Dixie's social and economic transformation.

With a sophisticated blend of statistical analysis, oral history interviews, and a variety of such traditional sources as company records, federal census schedules, and local newspapers, Flamming weaves an empirically convincing, richly embroidered description of life in a southern cotton-mill village. Whereas some historians have characterized southern textile workers as slaves in an "industrial plantation" system, and others have described the creation of an autonomous culture of opposition to management, Flamming focuses on the intimate, ever-changing, and potentially explosive relationship between millhands and managers, effectively demonstrating that both groups acted as architects of the emerging industrial order.

The Crown Mill story addresses important issues of social change faced by the modernizing South: the origins of small-town industry, worker migration from farm to factory, and the rise of an industrial elite; the adaptation of rural customs to an industrial environment and the development of a working-class culture; the advent of mill-village paternalism and the dilemmas of unionization; the impact of World War II on southern life; the collapse of paternalism and the antilabor backlash of the 1950s; and the decline of Dixie's cotton mills in the burgeoning Sunbelt economy. Ultimately, the history of the Crown Mill community both underscores the human dimensions of industrialization and places the New South in the broader context of an industrialized America.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2000
November 9
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
468
Pages
PUBLISHER
The University of North Carolina Press
SELLER
Ingram DV LLC
SIZE
11.2
MB

More Books Like This

Working-Class America Working-Class America
2023
The Fall of the House of Labor The Fall of the House of Labor
1987
The Working Class and Its Culture The Working Class and Its Culture
2019
Southern Capitalism Southern Capitalism
1986
Industrial Sunset Industrial Sunset
2003
Iron and Steel Iron and Steel
2011