
By Jim Ruppe
A Company Store has usually been associated with the development
of a frontier industry by providing goods and necessities and other
infrastructure needs of its workforce. This may have been considered
a necessity in that most industries of the “move the mills to
the cotton” movement were located just outside population centers
or in a completely rural setting. In order to provide a stable and
consistent labor force, many industries established a Company Store
to help to meet the basic needs of its employees.
The Company Store was not envisioned as a profit center but was seen
as an enterprise necessary to benefit the overall financial success
of the manufacturing operations. Some goods were sold to their employees
at cost or in some cases below cost with the expectation of recovery
from manufacturing operation results. Some companies would provide
basic necessities and dietary staples below cost and normal profit
margins were added to items considered luxuries. The Company Store
in the localized textile environment survived into the thirties and
during the Depression years some companies paid its workers in tokens
which could be redeemed at the store for supplies and commodities.
At some point most of these operations were leased to private entrepreneurs
or simply closed.
Although accusations have rumored that Company Stores were used
to stabilize labor by the use of employee debt, the writing of the
period does not bear out this premise.
In Mrs. Grover Haynes’ biography of R.R. Haynes, the Company
Store she refers to is the main building downtown, with three satellite
stores located within the mill village at sites that were convenient
and accessible to its residents.
“The management of Cliffside Mills established
three branch stores in convenient locations, in addition to the main
store. These stores handled practically everything there was to sell
to meet the needs of the people, and provided a market for everything
the farmer had to sell. The volume of business was large, indicated
from the fact that eight trucks were used daily in delivering groceries
and merchandise to the patrons of the different store. The stores
sold their goods to the employees at unusually low prices.”
I have heard references to two of these stores, but not the third
location.
Fairview Store
This structure was located near the limits of Cliffside near the
Fairview section and has been referred to simply as the “Old
Store Building”. It was located on the left hand side of Shelby
Highway before you reached C. P. Hamrick’s residence and store
building. This building was converted to multiple housing sometime
in the thirties (I have spoken to persons who lived in the apartments
in 1936). During my lifetime, I remember few if any tenants, as the
building stood vacant and at one point the windows were boarded and
it was used for storage.
River Street Store
Heading south on River Street, I remember a building on the right
side of the
street somewhere above the Island Ford Road intersection. There was
a River
Street level entrance and an entrance below the street level that
was accessed by a driveway behind the building, and I remember it
was divided into apartments. The House Listing of 1938 records a store
building on River Street and I think this was one of satellite store
buildings but I have no direct verification.
The Third Satellite Store?
I have never really known where the remaining store building was
located, but
from a logistical point of view, perhaps this building is shown in
the Postcard
Section in the view from the new school building looking south toward
the
t own. Its construction and style is not unlike the other stores.
My early memories was that the appearance was generally the same except
a brick
facade had been added and we called it the” Barney Davidson
Store”, referring to its then current proprietor. This building
later housed doctors’ offices and was razed with most of the
village in the late sixties. The reason I think that the third store
was in this building, is that it would nicely fit the location criteria
listed in Mrs. Haynes’ book and that it continued to be used
as a retail store into the 1950’s.