GASTONIA • NORTH CAROLINA VOLUME XIV - NUMBER 12 NOVEMBER • 1965 Tir«$ton« i~. Your Symbol of Quality and Service m Your $25,425.68 Helps 28 UF Agencies Record another high mark in Firestone Textiles com munity concern, with the largest gift in history to the Greater Gastonia United Fund. The total employee contribu tion of $25,425.68 represents an increase of $2,043 over the fig ure for 1964 which also was a record contribution. ^ collection of framed prints telling the his- '^I'y of natural-fibers textiles was for years ^^nibited on the office wall of Frank Davis at Firestone Textiles until retirement in 1963. This drawing “When The Cotton’s Rollin’ In” E. M. Schiwetz was given to Firestone News. It brings out a touch “things as they used to be” when the South rightfully claimed King ^otton, before the growing of the natural fiber moved toward the '^est Coast and became a mechanized operation. , The drawing represents a disappearing Southern scene replaced scientific progress which brought manmade fibers to textile pro- “^liction. In 1935, when Firestone began operating the Gastonia plant, production was cotton. Today more than 97 per cent is in the syn- ^^tics family—principally nylon and rayon, but also others such as f’^lyesters, olefins, sarans and glass fibers. It is a lesson in keeping up ^ith progress to stay in business and serve growing needs of the ^^stomer. when the cottons rollin ’ • in From days gone by Solicitation among employees here was completed in early October just as the community- wide UF campaign was being launched. Firestone pledges rep resent the largest single collec tion toward the community goal of $248,556 to provide 28 local, state and national services for health, welfare, recreation and character-building. P. R. Williams Jr., division production manager, and J. G. Tino Jr., plant engineer, were chairmen in what is the only in- plant financial drive during the year. They reported an average giv ing of $18.61 among employees, along with still another record; 984 persons making pledges by the "fair-share" method. General manager Harold Mer cer and production manager F. B. Galligan (this year first vice president of the Greater Gastonia UF) recalls that" throughout the many years of plant united giving, employee concern has steadily increased. They cited, for example, that as recent as 1961 the UF gift here was $15,549, compared with this year’s figure of $24,737. —more on page 2 Three Scholarship Students Are In School Three students from Firestone . ^xtiles families are currently School under the College Scholarship Daniel of Firestone Program. Fowler Jr., win- the four-year company scholarship in 1963, is a junior at the University of North Caro lina, Chapel Hill. He is working on a double major in zoology and chemistry. Brenda Louise High, a 1965 scholarship winner, has begun her four years at Wake Forest College, pursuing a major in education. Erna Jane Bagwell, the second 1965 winner, has be gun her studies toward a major in chemistry and pre-med at the T^hat First Thanksgiving '— In North Carolina . thanksgiving Day, with p sideline traditions of ^rkey dinners, football and commercialized ^stivals, is essentially a re- observance. It is a for giving thanks to ^od for the harvest and His oundless blessings during year. 1 all began, we are told in ^story and reference books, by 6 Piigrirns in New England, he Pilgrim influence has per- ^ded American life. They set a of courage and faith and ^ story has'been told to gen- ^^tions of school children. To- We honor their high purpose keep it as a part of our tra dition. Added to the tradition from Old Plymouth are some other facts which also go into our Thanksgiving Story. In recent years a number of articles have appeared which bring to light some obscure his tory on the subject. ONE ARTICLE by John Gould, a citizen of Maine and himself a descendant of Pil grims, says that the Mayflower’s passengers were not the first settlers in New England—that in one instance, there was a landing of Englishmen on the shore of Maine Aug. 9, 1607. And, he adds, “the arriving set tlers immediately held a service University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Neil Tate is the most recent Gastonia-area student to gradu ate on a Firestone scholarship. With a major in political science from Wake Forest, he has start ed work on the MA degree in political science at Tulane Uni versity. He is studying under a fellowship program for future college teachers, sponsored by a Ford Foundation grant. of thanksgiving for their safe crossing of the severe North At lantic.” This, of course, was before tlie Pilgrims came in 1620. More interesting still is word from the distinguished histori- an-editor Virginius Dabney who presents evidence that South erners started Thanksgiving at least 14 years before the Pil grims. Says Dabney: “The first Thanksgiving held in America” has long been credited to the Pilgrim Fathers. Major histories and encyclo pedias unite in declaring that our annual custom of giving thanks began at Plymouth in 1621. Mr. Dabney goes on to say that the first Thanksgiving in this country occurred in April, 1607, when the Jamestown col onists erected a cross and knelt to give thanks for their safe ar rival. Another well - document- The 100-Level DeLuxe Champion Stylish . . . Dependable . . . Durable . . . Supersafe. The new 100-level DeLuxe Champion tire from Firestone. It comes on most of the 19S6 automobiles. There are many improvements in the all-new tire with the wrap-around tread for better cornering. Whitewall is slightly ed service of thanksgiving was held at Jamestown in June 1610, and “it was conducted by the emaciated survivors of the ‘starving time’.” Dabney holds that the most significant of the early Thanks giving services in Virginia was held in 1619 by the “39 settlers who had just landed at Berkley Hundred up the James River from Jamestown. It was the first in America to be formally designated as ‘Thanksgiving Day’, with directions that it be repeated annually thereafter.” IHANKSGIVING THE HISTORIAN could have gone further and given credit to North Carolina. From his own more than a half inch wide. Five years ago the average whitewall was two and a half inches. Firestone Akron secretary Sara Wolford shows off the new tire. account, he wrote that at least two Thanksgiving services were hold in Virginia more than a decade before 1621—not count ing one described by Capt. Ar thur Barlowe (who had been sent out to Virginia by Sir Wal ter Raleigh) as having been held there by his expedition in 1584. This places the first Thanks giving in America in the present North Carolina. The Amadas and Barlowe expedition entered Pamlico Sound and reached an island which the Indians called Roanoke. Later the land was christened “Virginia” but that part of it visited by Barlowe is now in North Carolina. Credit for being “first” is not so important. It is good to know that our forefathers generally expressed a spirit of thanksgiv ing to God for His blessings. And in this free land still, we, too, have the same privilege.