Written by by Jeff Byrd | |
Monday, 22 December 2008 | |
![]() Workers at the Tryon Hosiery Mill in the 1910s, in a picture owned by Anna Pack Conner from the collection of Pat Panther Hart. Conner said she believes the children were also workers in the plant. “I’ve had several tell me their fathers started there when they were ten or 12 years old,” she said. “They worked when they were not in school.” The plant most recently housed the yarn dying operations of Grover Industries Inc. until it closed last October, ending nearly 120 years of manufacturing history in Lynn, N.C. Conner is currently at work on a book regarding Lynn history and invites anyone with memories of these pictures or Lynn in general to contact her. ![]() 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.
![]() Gary Semmel, Grover’s Lynn plant manager, stands next to the dye machines which put as many as 5,000 different colors on millions of pounds of yarn. The plant closed in October. (photo by Jeff Byrd) |
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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