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Stories and drawings |
Cliffside Mills' cloth production was a totally- contained in-house process in that the mill purchased cotton, processed it into thread, and wove it into the gingham cloth that Cliffside Mills then produced. After the spindle had twisted (spun) the cotton strands into yarn (thread), it was necessary that the thread be wound onto a wooden bobbin (spool) that the shuttle of a loom could take back and forth over and under the warp threads to weave the cloth. Earnest went to work in Cliffside Mills when he was a young boy, working as a doffer. His job was to remove the filled wooden bobbins of thread from the spinning frame and replace them with empty bobbins. In 1917, as the United States was drawn into WWI, 21 year old Earnest quit his job in Cliffside Mills and joined the Navy. He was originally sent to Richmond, Virginia, then to Great Lakes, Michigan, and then was stationed aboard a ship that sailed the South China Seas. A little less than a year after his discharge in October of 1919, he married Eddith Martin, and they raised their two children, Frances and Durward, on Bonner Road in the Cherokee Creek Community.
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