
By Kristin Reynolds
The Shelby Star, January 24, 1997
CLIFFSIDE A strike
every 15 minutes, a chime on each hour.
For the early 1900s to around the middle of the
century, residents relied on the town clock while they shopped, mingled
and browsed.
Sitting atop the community building in the heart
of downtown, the Cliffside clock was practically a landmark on its
own.
So when the town Raleigh R. Haynes founded was taken
over by Cone Mills in the middle of the decade, townspeople saved
the clock from destruction.
Today, it stands on Main Street as a memorial
a reminder of what the town once was.
Myrtle Mashburn, a lifelong Cliffside resident,
remembers the clock's history.
“The clock was put on top of the community
building,” she said, referring to what once housed a movie theater,
a library and even a gymnasium.
“(The community building) was also used as
an inn,” she said. “Those were the days before hotels and
motels. When people came in on business, they stayed there. There
was also a kitchen and a dining area for community use.”
The community building was one of many establishments
in the area.
“The Haynes Bank was downtown and there was
a grocery store, drug store, a general store, restaurants and a post
office,” she said.
Reprinted with permission from The Shelby Daily
Star. Copyright owned by The Shelby Daily Star.