
R.R. Haynes Built Town and Mill...Now, Only The Mill Survives
They saw their children born here. They saw the
summer sun give life to flowers and trees and country children's cheeks.
They found joy here in the fragrant autumn evenings under soft southern
stars. And they watched themselves and their children and their town
grow strong.
Now the town is Dead.
The people, when you can find any, smile at strangers.
But their eyes avoid looking down the main street of the town because
they don't want to be reminded that there is no town to see.
By Barbara Blake
The Asheville Citizen-Times, February 27, 1977
Cliffside, North Carolina. A rude example of American
technology and enterprise marching into the simple life of a tiny
mill village in the corner of Rutherford County.
Demolition and destruction of hundreds of homes,
in the name of progress and government regulations, has squeezed the
life out of an incidental village in a remote section of the U.S.A.
“You get to thinking about it sometimes and
you start to get real sad,” Paul McKinney said slowly. “Seems
like they could have kept some kind of town alive.”
In 1899, a man named Raleigh Rutherford Haynes saw
a dream of bringing a town called Cliffside to life. A model community
with a great textile plant and a thriving village of happy, industrious
citizens.
Within a decade, the laughter of children rang through
the tree-lined streets, neighbors gathered in the evenings for social
fellowship, businesses sprang up on corners up and down the mainstreet,
and roots were planted firmly in a progressive little community.
Following Haynes' death in 1917, until the 1960s,
community life in Cliffside thrived. Four generations of citizens
made their livings, raised their children and worshipped as they pleased.
Houses were, although rented by the mill owners,
known by family names, such as “the Scruggs house”, or “the
Hawkins place.”
“Neighbors were neighbors then,”
John Tinkler recalled. “You could leave your house open all weekend
and not worry about a thing. Your neighbors took care of you.”
In 1919, the R.R. Haynes Memorial Building was erected,
and still stands as a monument to the creator of the town born of
a dream and put to death by reality.
“That was the place we all gathered
every night,” said Shirley White, who raised two children in
Cliffside. They had basketball games, the moving pictures, barbershops,
beauty shops, a library, even places upstairs for visitors to stay
overnight.
“Anybody could go in there day or night and
find something to do. It was where everything happened.”
And yet today, the tattered remains of starched
white curtains blow gently through the jagged glass of a window in
the building.
One stands at the side of the main street and listens
to unnatural silence, broken only the the sounds of padlocks clicking
against the molded wood of the library and theater doors.
““What do I think about the possibility
of that old building going down like the rest of them?” Tinkler
said. “Well, it's this way. You hate to see something you've
seen grow up from nothing get destroyed, for no particular reason
But what could we do?””
There was, in fact, little that any of Cliffside's
natives could do to save the town.
In 1945, Cliffside Mills was merged with Proximity
Manufacturing Company of Greensboro, which was converted to Cone Mills
Corporation in 1948.
In the late 1960s, Cone, which owned the majority
of homes and businesses within the town itself, began the process
of demolition.
Bud Willis, who grew up near Cliffside and is now
manager of the Cliffside plant of Cone Mills, tried to explain the
process:
“I'm only speaking from hearsay, because
I've only been manager here for eight months, but when the federal
government brought in so many regulations in the 60s, the mill company
decided that it could no longer afford the remodeling and renovation
of all the house the mill owned.
“The houses went first, then the businesses
began to be used less and less, and it became economically unprofitable
for those running them to continue the operations.
“You just watched the little community
die, physically as well as industrially. But it had to happen,”
he said.
Fashionably-dressed secretaries walked quietly and
efficiently in and out of carpeted offices in the two-year-old addition
to the Cliffside plant, which now produces denim in both old and new
buildings.
“We gave all of the people plenty of
time to find other places to live they were given the choice
of buying the house they were renting, and having it moved, or buying
a house elsewhere, or building out in the country somewhere.
“And I think that most of them, in the
end, appreciated being forced to move. It made them make a decision
they had hesitated to make before,” Willis said.
“Lots of folks that worked at the mill
moved nearby (after the houses were gone),” Paul McKinney recalled.
“They came back to work. But they haven't
come back to church. And they aren't neighbors anymore...They aren't
friends to walk to work with, like they used to be.”
The granddaughter of Raleigh Rutherford Haynes would
have nodded at that. Mrs. Beth Caldwell Padgett has seen the process,
too.
“In the days of my grandfather, there
was that close relationship between the mill staff and owners, and
the people of the village.
“Now there's such a different policy.
They're nice to the workers...but there's not that family feeling.
“I loved Cliffside,” she said.
“Now it's gone. I guess there's nothing more I can say.”
A large television screen in the gatehouse office
keeps a constant and unmoving eye on the parking lot questioning
the presence of strangers and unnatural occurrences. An imposing steel
fence imprisons the plant and the Haynes building.
“We have had calls from people concerned
about the possibility of us tearing down the memorial building,”
said Willis. “First of all, the building has no useful purpose
as it stands nor, and it is a safety hazard.
“I had our architects check into renovating
the building, and they came up with estimates close to $200,000. But
for now, it is unsafe for use, in the opinion of my engineers.
“The company has taken the standpoint
that there are no plans to take the building down. But we have made
it clear to those concerned that if it ever does happen, we are committed
to taking down the clock in the building, and the plaque, and building
a memorial on the old Haynes homestead to include those items.
“Cone is extremely interested in this
area,” Willis said. “And we are interested in the welfare
of all those who live here. We have tried to do the best we could
for all of them.”
Reprinted with permission from The Asheville Citizen-Times.
Footnote: The building eventually came down;
the clock and plaque were moved in 1979 to a new memorial tower on
the spot where R.R. Haynes home stood.