We
received the following from Richard C. Fluck.
“My great-grandmother, Theodosia
Charlotta Martin Jarrett, operated a boardinghouse in Cliffside from about
1912 to about 1925. The boardinghouse had nine rooms, all with outside entrances.
She charged $6 per week for room and board. A library was built on the site of
the boardinghouse about 1940. If I had to guess, I would say her boarding house
was on the east side of N. Main Street, somewhere close to the Baptist Church.
When I visited Cliffside in the early '90s with my mother, who remembered visiting
her grandmother as a child, we found the site (we think) of her boarding house. Only
some concrete steps remained at the sidewalk. We then went a couple of
blocks north to a small restaurant and had a delightful meal.
“Theodosia Charlotta Martin was originally from Chesnee, and the widow
of Alfred Eliphus 'Loge' Jarrett, who died in 1911. Several of their children
ended up in Shelby.
“Following are excerpts from an autobiography written by Charles Terrell
Freeman, my great uncle, in about 1950. It is exactly as written, complete with
all errors.”
“A man by the name of Raleigh Hanes had built
a mill three miles down the river from Henrietta and
named the place Cliffside. His superentendants name
was Fate Hughs. Hughs came up to our home one Sunday
afternoon wanting us to move to Cliffside. He said
we could not take the dog as Hanes could not stand
the sight of a dog, and would not allow any one to
own a dog in Cliffside. I told him I would not go unless
I could take my dog. He would come back most every
week trying to get us to move to Cliffside, but I refused
to budge. Finally he came up and said Hanes had given
in so we moved to Cliffside in the fall of 1904. My
oldest sister who had married stayed in Henrietta and
every few days we would go up to see her (that would
be Minnie Sinclair Freeman, who married Burl Lee Hames).
One night at twelve o'clock a baby was borned to my
brothers wife (John Moten Freeman had married Lola
Kathryn Hardin, and Lottie Marcella Freeman was born
March 15, 1905 in Cliffside). My brother wrote
a note to my sister as follows
“By puppy express baby girl borned to
Mr & Mrs John Freeman at twelve midnight on such
a date.
“He tied the note around Dixie's neck and told
him to take it to Minnie. He went straight to her house
and scratched on the door. When she saw something around
his neck she took it off and tossed it out in the
yard, the next morning when she was sweeping her yard
she saw that a piece of paper was tied up in the string.
She picked it up and unwrapped the paper and discovered
the note. They still have the note.
“After we had been living at Cliffside for about six month my dog disapeared.
I gave him up as dead. So one morning there was a wagon standing in front of
our house and I saw a dog head looking over the top of the wagon bed and two
little boys holding it. I was standing in the doorway. I called mother and told
her that I believed it was Dixie. She said she did not think it was him, so after
a few minutes, I walked to the wagon. He jumped into my arms, it was Dixie, he
ran into the house and jumped up on the bed where my father was, then ran into
the other rooms to see the rest of the family. Then my father explained that
at the request of Mr. Hanes he had found Dixie a good home out in the country.
He said that Mr. Hanes had ask him to let this family have Dixie as two of his
nieces had obtained dogs and he could not stand seeing a dog. So I agreed and
took Dixie back to the boys in the wagon. So Hanes had his nieces to get rid
of their dogs. The last time I heard from Cliffside there were still no dogs
there. There used to be a saying that there were grown people living in Cliffside
who had never seen a dog.
“I worked at night at Cliffside, doffing. I made fifty cents a night five
night a week. Later I was promoted to head doffer at seventy-five cent a night.
“Cliffside had checks in the denominations of five ten - twenty-five and
fifty cents and one dollar. You could draw on your time and trade it out between
pay days. He required each family to draw out most of their pay in checks so
that he would know that they were trading at the company store, he sold every
thing any one would need. All prices were in line with stores elsewhere and many
articles were cheaper and he saw to it that we took advantage of it.
“There was only one church in Cliffside so all denominations went to it.
They were mostly Methodist and Baptist. In Cliffside like Henrietta every one
attended church.
“I had a brother living there and he decided to pay cash and not draw out
checks, so after about three month Mr. Hanes went to him and told him that he
noticed that he was not drawing out checks. Brother told him no I am not
but I am trading at the company store, Hanes told him that he must draw out checks
so that he would know that he was trading at the company store. My brother quit
and moved to another town. The company furnished houses rent free so when you
quit you have to move out emeadiatly.
“In the spring of 1905 I heard that you could buy a phonograph at Forest
city for eight dollar, so I hired a horse and buggy one Saturday and drove up
there. I got the phonograph an six records for eight dollars, this was the first
one to be owned by any one in Cliffside. The only ones we had seen were men coming
around with them charging five cents a record.
“I became very poplar for a while taking my phonograph to parties.
“We lived by the lake and on Sunday after noon the people would line up
on the other side of the lake. I would bring the record player out on the porch
and play the records over and over again. I rember two of the records. One was
'I am old but I am awfully tough.' The other was 'Hiawaha.'
“At Cliffside the boys and girls were from twelve to sixteen years old
that worked in the spinning. Hanes would not stand for them to be misstreated.
One day the overseer got mad at a boy and fired him. The boy was around fourteen.
I saw the boy leaving the mill crying. In a few minutes Hanes came up to the
spinning room. The overseer and I was standing at the head of the stairs when
Mr. Hanes came with the boy. He ask the overseer what he had fired the boy for,
the overseer started trying to explain to him. Hanes told to put the boy back
to work, he told him that doffers were hard to get. He said he could hire
planty of overseers so the
boy went back to work. The overseer told me that he
had a good mind to quit, but where else could he get
a job making thirty dollars a month.
“Well my brother that left Cliffside wound up in Lindale, Ga. A mill several
times larger than Cliffside. He had got a job there as head of the supply room
an wanted us to move out there, so on the first day of July we were on our way.
We shipped our household goods by freight and we went by train. I will never
forget the way the railroad station looked in Atlanta. It had not been built
very long. It was the most beutifull thing I ever saw. Well we arrive at Lindale,
and in about ten days our household goods arived, so we moved them into a four
room house.”
Editor's note: The Jarretts
indeed ran a boarding house, at #1 Reservoir Street.
We hope to uncover more information about and photographs
of the people in this story.
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