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Landmarks
The Dry Cleaners
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The long, low structure was built very soon after Cliffside was founded, for the purpose of showing silent movies, or “flickers,” as they were called in those early days.
As a theater, it was rendered obsolete when the Memorial Building was completed in 1920, providing the community with a modern new theater.
In 1927 Cliffside Mills renovated the structure to house a new business, “Rutherford County Dry Cleaners,” owned by Geo. C. Shuford and A. M. Haynes. |
This photo of the building was taken in December 1970, over half a century after it was built. By now, like the rest of Cliffside, it looked scraggly and rundown, but apparently the cleaners was still in operation, for there was a lighted Pepsi machine—and a weight machine!— at the front.
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| In the ‘50s the company, now called the “Cliffside Dry Cleaners,” was run by Jobie and Beth Hawkins Biggerstaff. Here's Jobie “spotting” a garment. This may have been the original equipment from the '20s. |
The business also handled laundry, which was actually done elsewhere, at places like Forest Dale Laundry in Forest City. This is George Hawkins, Beth's brother, bringing back a load of finished laundry for distribution. |
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| From front to back: Pauline Dover, Lillian Wilkins and Euell Macopson. |
This is John L. Wilkins. These photos are from about 1955. |
Over the years, many others worked here, including Ivy Shuford, Bill Horton and Roland Wallace. These were hot, sweaty jobs—every machine emitted steam, in a room cooled only by a noisy, dirty exhaust fan.
In the mid ‘70s, the creaky, sagging old building was gutted and razed.
Photos by Roy Lee Harris, contributed by Sherry Harris Phelps.
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