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On such lines was Raleigh Haynes in the solitude of his own soul proceeding when he came to Cliffside. Men believed in him. The men who are clustered about him now are longtime associates. W.L. Packard, the present superintendent of Cliffside, followed Mr. Haynes from Henrietta. Mr. Packard has known of him for 30 years and after a ripe cotton-mill experience in Cleveland County, he has been with the Cliffside Mills now for 10 years. The chief machinist has been there longer. G.K. Moore has known him since boyhoodbeen to camp meetings with him in other, older days, began working for him 24 years ago, and now is what is called the right man or general manager under Charles H. Haynes of the whole property and its varied interests.
How he raised $25
Mr. Moore, during my conversation with him, told me a story of a Baptist Association meeting that he and Mr. Haynes attended during the first years of Mr. Haynes' married life. A new church was needed, and subscriptions were taken. “There were a number of men there, said Mr. Moore, “who were well able to contribute liberally, but they consoled their consciences with a subscription, some $1, some only 50 cents. When the paper came to Mr. Haynes sitting near them he put his name down for $25. He had a small store at Ferry, and on his way home he told me what he had done, saying that he couldn't dream of how he could pay that amount. He told his wife, who met his mood with good cheering words of encouragement. Then followed a trip to Spartanburg with eggs and butter and chickens. A man stopped him on the street and priced his merchandise. There happened a high-priced holiday demand in Spartanburg. Mr. Haynes was amazed when the whole wagonload sold at prices he never imagined to be possible. When he returned home he had enough money to pay his $25 subscription to the church, the expenses to Spartanburg and return and $2 over. He told me this himself.”
Mr. Haynes in coming to Cliffside kept near him not only his old friends, but there seems to have been an unspoken, persistent mental purpose to bring together around him his whole family of children and grandchildren.
This result struck me as unparalleled in my experience. Here was a man with eight children and all lived now in comfortable, happy homes practically in Cliffside or within gunshot almost.
In the order of their ages these children are: Florence, who married Z.O. Jenkins, manager of the company stores; Robert E., married, who, though in bad health, conducts a dairy, corn mill, etc, nearby; Charles H., representing his father and sole executor of his estate; Sarah, the wife of Robert Love, who lives in Gastonia; Walter, married, who is a prominent and successful farmer at his father's birthplace, Ferry; Grover Cleveland, married, a doctor of dentistry, who now, however, devotes most of his time assisting his brother Charles; Eulah, the wife of Dr. J.R. Shull, one of the physicians of Cliffside; Virginia, the wife of Barron Caldwell who is in charge of the hydroelectric power plant now nearing completion almost within a stone's throw of Cliffside.
The instinct in him seemed almost dominant to gather under his wing those of his own flesh and blood. In his spacious and well-appointed home there lived with him his son, Charles, Grover and his wife and his daughter, Mrs. Caldwell and her husband. In one end of the home were his apartments where he worked alone with his plans and purposes for the future.
Copyright © 2008 The Cliffside Historical Society