Written by by Jeff Byrd | |
Monday, 22 December 2008 | |
Workers at Grover Industries Inc. lived by the motto, ‘You dye a little every day.’ They actually dyed a lot. At Grover’s Lynn plant, during peak production years – just a few years back in the mid-1990s – 125 employees ran a multifaceted operation putting color on about 127,000 pounds of yarn a week. These were heavier, “coarse count” yarns used mostly by customers who wove fabrics for the furniture industry. Unfortunately, that business has been declining in the United States in recent years. Just in North Carolina, 30 furniture factories have closed since 1995, according to Duke University Fuqua School of Business. In 2002, U.S. consumers’ foreign-made furniture purchases mushroomed, driving the U.S. trade deficit for residential furniture to $11.4 billion, an increase of nearly $9 billion from the previous year. Sixteen North Carolina furniture factories closed in 2003 alone.
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Tuesday, December 23, 2008
End of a way of life: Grover closes after 120 years in Lynn
(From the Tryon Daily Bulletin)
Sunday, December 7, 2008
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