Historical and Industrial Supplement The Gaston Progress GASTONIA, N. C.. THURSDAY, JULY 4th, 1912. Greater Gastonia Number Part Two GASTONIA ilTY of Magic Energy, Chief Cotton Center of the great and growing Southland, County seat of Gaston, in which is located 65 Cot ton Mills. A Young and Hustling Com munity that is rapidly making a name for itself m the world of Commerce, Finances and Art, Delighttul Climate, Moral and Cultured Citizenship. Ideal Center for both the Home Seeker and the Money Maker. A City of Opportunity that Grows Greater Every Day. city. The mills are equipped with 160,000 spindles and 2,500 looms, and an enormous output of yarns in skeins, warps, cones and tubes, combed and carded, sheetings, shirtin&s, outings, and print goods is shipped from here to all parts of the world. It is es timated that no less than 40,000 bales of cotton are consumed annually, and some statisticians place the number at a much higher figure. While on the subject of cotton it may be well to .state that in Gaston county in the coun^try tributary to this city, there a.;' about 63 cotton mills, and more tl^an in any county of the south. All Oi\ this has been accomplished since lb*88, and is but a beginning, for no place ever had a more prosperous present, or a future that is brighter ’A,l':h pr'V'^ise than has Gastonia. Her inhat>'* p-,,:.:. Eureka! I have found the sylvan vale— The sunny clime—the home of buoyant health— The teeming soil—the virtuous com monwealth. THE CITY OF GASTONIA. Gastonia has well been called the “City of Opportunity,” for there is no place in this or any other country that offers to men in all the various walks /'of life a better chance to win out if they ai'e industrious, capable and have^ determination ’.:^succeed thf *■ , d .it. the north, west, east or south, and give him the heartiest of handclasps if he is the proper kind of a man. There is enough for all and plenty of room to grow. Location of Gastonia No better location for the site of a city whose chief industry is and always will be the manufacture of textiles, could be found. Situated as it is in th^ center of the famous Piedmont region, one of the healthiest and most fertile spots of the country, the climate is all that could be desh’ed. II is entirely free from the malaria of ihejow country, and the cold, and fogs ' altitudes, and./the death in the wof/ ing can -gru _gress dr^ng the past few years has bef',”'"nothing short of magical. She has no ancient history, does not live in 'che shadows of the past, with its narrow confines, and more distinctly than almost any other North Carolina city belongs to the present and the , facilities. The country surrounding >>3' the people7^; Southern'® i^t^its intersection with ihe Carolina & Northwestern railv-ay and the Piedmont & Northern it lias 46 passenger trains daily, furn ishing unsurpassed transportation pursuits. There- was not an industry) worth mentioning except a grist mill, for miles around, and not even the most Gptmistic of men ever dreamed that in the site of the old Davis farm a flourishing and thriving modern manufacturing city would ever spring into life. The town grew gradually, however, for the surrounding country was rich and a number of retired planters made their homes here. In 1888 it claimed a population of 800, but still slumbered a typical Southern village of the cotton belt. Then sud denly something happened. In thio epochal year of 1888 a few progiessive gentlemen some, meajis conc^iver,,^^ the most optmistic of peoplt hears the good old times bt.ji che war” mentioned except by a few old croakers such as is to be found in every community, and the city itself partakes of the nature of those who built it. A Modern City. There is nothing that partakes of the country .town about Gastonia. Nearly all of the old frame structures have been dismantled and their places taken by modern brick, cement and iron building that would be a credit to any city in the land. Few places oi the size of this has so many or more ' substantial stores, warehouscr-- and factories, handsomer public buildinfe.^ and churches and more beautiful homes. Gastonia is at the same time a busy manufacturing city, and a beautiful one, a combination rarely to be found The principal thorough fare is paved with bithulitic, a com position somewhat similar to asphalt, the sidewalks are of cement and in the near future it is proposed to pav'e the entire citv with improved road- be done in irogres- up this and yarn valued approximately at $5,000,000.00 are shipped every year, some of it as far as China. Three strong banks which have shown a con tinuous increase in surplus, deposits and earnings every year. One of the best school systems in the south, 31 teachers being on the rolls. Three railroads offer splendid shipping facil- ites. They do a freight business of upwards of $1,000,000 a year. There is a taxable property valuation of be tween $6,000,000 and $7,000,000. Within a few years real estate values have increased several hundred pei cent. There are two good semi-week ly newspapers, The Progress and The Gazette. Two theatres furnish the peo ple with amusement at more than rea sonable prices. There are eight whole sale grocery, feed and fruit stores. It has two high-class modern hospitals, a new postoffice at a cost of $65,000 will scon be erected in the square, the ap propriation having been made. A building permit for the erection of a house is issued nearly every other day. The Piedmont Telegraph and a Telephone Company supply excel lent service. It is the county seat of Gaston, one of the richest counties in North Carolina, and has a mag- Ward, J, O. White; Second Ward, S. M. Morris; Third Ward, A. B. Elliott; Fourth Ward, C. L. Chandler; Fifth W’ard, A. M. Dixon; Sixth Ward, J. H. Separk; Seventh Ward, John O. Ran kin; City Clerk, John R. Rankin; Chief of Police and Tax Collector, J. W. Carroll; Chief of Fire Department and Building Inspector; B. B. Gardner, Assistant Building Inspector, Sanitary and Quarantine Officer, B. W. Craig; Superintendent Water, Light and Sewers, H. Rutter; Street Commis sioner, S. M. Morris; City Phy sician and Health Officer, Dr. M. G. Andrews; School Board, Mayor Thomas L. Craig, Chairman ex-officio, B F. S. Austin, E. J. Rankin, S. Settlemyer, W. V. West, S. N. Boyce. Dr. D. E. McConnell and J. P. Reid; Supt. of Schools, Joe S. Wray. Churches Are Numerous. Gastonia is well supplied with; churches of the principal Christian sects, and all of them have a large and growing membership. Within the city proper there are twelve buildings, many of them being more than us ually handsome and substantial. The Methodist Episcopal South, has three erything canno that- future. And it is an entirely leg' mate and pardonable source of ''oal the city is rich and fertile, to a degree possessed by but few sections, farm- An organization was affected kn\. Gastonia Co .ton Manufacturir^^^ pany was incorporated, the V.ders ct the enterprise being MessV.. R. C. G Love, John H. Craig, James D. Moore and George A. Gray. The little town seemed to have been touched with a magic wand when the wheels of the machinery began to turn, and tO: spared. the majorit:' my of them, ante-bellum time; pride that its phenominal growth and progress has been due to the efforts almost entirely of men born right here on the soil of old Gaston and the sur rounding country. Glance over the brief biographical sketches given elsewhere in this special issue of The Progress, and it will be found that 90 per cent, of the men who are respon sible for the making of the town have been North Carolinians, the decend- ants of those same game fighters who won the famous battle at King’s Mountain during the Revolution, and changed the fate of the nation, and of the men who signed the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, before Thomas Jefferson, wrote his famous document. But it must not be thought that the men of this new generation are in any way clannish, for they are not. As a matter of fact no warmer hearted or more generous people ever lived and they heartily welcome the stranger within their gates be he from INTERIOR FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ers growing with great success cotton, grain, clover, grasses and garden truck of all kinds, for which a ready market at good prices is found in this and neighboring cities. The supply is not equal to the great demand made by a rapidly growing population and as a location for the small farmer and i fiom that day to this.the story of the city has been one of constant and sub stantial growth, and the development of long dorminant resources. Wi^iji 'five years the population doubled. In 1895 it was 2,313; . five years later iti had reached 4,610; in 1906 it was 8,000; and conservative estimates fruit grower, the advantages offered i made by those in a position to know' are superb, and only await develop- \ place the present population at about ment by the industrious husbandman. x^OOO. Hardly a day passes that this Gastonia's Phenominal Growth. Nothing shows the growth and population of a community so accu rately as does statistics of the in crease of its population. Men. do not remain in a place where there is no work, there are too many opportuni ties always to be found. Everyone has work here, and the man and woman who is not afraid of it need never be idle.lS77^_the city_ was - only a struggling village with a population of perhaps 250 people, who were for the most part engaged in agricultural is not increased by the addition of sturdy, industrious settlers who have heard of the opportunities offered here, and have come to take advan tage of them. Cotton is King. Old King Cotton reigns supreme in Gastonia all throughout the county. There is located in the city proper a dozen textile corporations, operat ing 16 mills and having a capitaliza tion of $3,000,000 with an annual pay' roll of $600,000.00, most of which is spent among the merchants of the Public Utilities. One of the first matters that received the attention of the people of Gastonia when the city began to grow was in 1899 when by popular vote $105,000 in bonds was issued for th£ purpose of graded schools, electric lights, water works, and a sewerage sys tem. All of these necessary utilities are owned by the city and with the exception of the schools of course, pay a handsome profit which is in variably used in betterments. Follow ing this policy there is always a fund on hand to make necessary improve ments, and all of the systems are kept in the highest state of efficiency. They are managed by trained men, who thoroughly know their business, and politics are not allowed to enter into this branch of the public ser vice. Neither has it much to do with any branch, the people voting for ti^ man rather than the political party to which he belongs. The Water Supply. iCrastonia is fortunate in having a ^.'ater supply that is second to that of no city of its size in the country, and will be sufficient for a number of .Vears to come, notwithstanding its ^Dhenominally rapid growth. It comes Long Creek, about two miles '■ri-om the city, the water shed of ^’hich has never been contaminated, and is for the most part covered with virgin pine forest. An analysis of the water is regularly made by the State chemist who has time and again given it the highest mark as to purity. There is an efficient fire department, of which B. B. Gardner is chief, com posed of 15 men. It is well equipped with a modern hose wagon drawn by two horses and carrying 3,000 feet of hose. An engine is unnecessary as the pressure of water from the reservoir is 90 pounds, sufficient to send a stream over any building in the city, the exception being the Realty build ing. The company is composed of 15 men,, and the depg,rtment is partially paid. What Gastonia Has. More cotton mills than any city in Gaston county which has more mills than any part of the United States of America. Their 12 modern structures, all working full time and many night and day. Over 5,000 people are em ployed in its mills, and the annual pay rolls reach three-quarters of a million dollars. Shipments of cloth ud build- head of .narge the .nd sewerage In Gastonia these were all built by the municipality out the bond.issue of nO^.OOO in^9, kSJ although a great deal more has been spent on them from time to time, sinct then. 'IsihWeNyiL^ngineer, Mr. most f. . -■ , lax- d ex- ■ of STATUTE TO COMMEMORATE THE BATTLE OF KING’S MOUNTAIN nificent court house. What it has in other lines of endeavor may be as certained by reading carefully this special issue of The Gaston Progress, the leading paper of the city. As a Wholesale Center. Gastonia as a center of the whole sale trade is splendidly located and those who have embarked in busi ness along this line have been most successful. Surrounded as it is with a number of small towns within a radius of 75 miles both in North and South Carolina the wholesale mer chants of the city have for some years successfully competed with those of other and much larger cities for the possession of the trade of this terri tory which naturally belongs to Gastonia. The competition has been keen, and the commercial battle waged with vigor, but no one will deny that Gastonia has won out especially as re gards the grocery, fruit, cigar and to bacco business. There is located in the city five wholesale grocery houses, two fruit importing concerns, three hay and grain houses, several who handle cigars and tobacco, and every year the volume of trade in its favor shows a healthy and steady increase. More extended reference is made to these progressive establishments in other pages of this issue. How the City is Governed. Gastonia has the same general municipal government as other North Carolina cities, although she is more than usually fortunate in the fact that her most prominent manufacturers, merchants and professional men do not shirk their duty as is the case in many cities, and are never so busy that they cannot find time to give their services to the public without compensation. As a consequence municipal affairs have been adminis tered along business lines, and the people of the city has had an economi cal and at the same time progressive government. The present officials of the present day are: Mayor, Thomas L. Craig; Mayor protem, Jos. H. Separk; Board of Aldermen, First buildings. The First Church founded in 1881, the West End and the Ozark, near the mills of that name. The First Baptist Church was dedicated in September, 1885, and the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in 1905. The First Presbyterian Church was organ ized July 16, 1882, in a building on Long street, but now has a handsome structure on Marrietta street near Main, which was dedicated September 11, 1898. It has a seating capacity of 1,000. The Associated Reformed Presbyterian Church was organized in 1886 and the building dedicated the same year. St. Mark’s^ Protestant Episcopal Church was completed in 1900. It is located on Long street, and is in a most flourishing condition. The Evangelical Lutheran Church was organized in 1898 and the present building was erected the following year. St. Michael’s Roman Catholic Church was built in 1902. Mass is said every second and fourth Sunday of each month at 11 a. m. There are also a number of fine churches for colored people, nearly all of the de nominations having a building. Moving the County Seat. One of the most interesting events in the history of Gastonia was the removal of the county seat from the old town of Dallas where it had been located since the county was formed in 1847 to this city. Dallas is the oldest town in the county, having been named in honor of George M. Dallas, vice-president during the ad ministration of President Polk. It was in those days quite a lively little town, as towns went then, while Gas tonia had never been dreamed of by any one. But about 10 years ago when this city was fairly started on its career of progress and prosperity the question of the removal of the county seat began to be agitated and as a consequence much ill-feeling was engendered for the removal of the court house and officials from one town to another is a serious matter. It is in the nature of a slur on the town losing the prize, and a big feather in the cap of the one gaining