top of page
Search

Piedmont's YWCA Building and It's History

Writer's picture: JoeJoe

Piedmont Manufacturing Company started spinning its spindles in 1876 after construction of the first mill building by owner Henry Hammett. Soon after completion of the first mill building, Hammett moved on to build more than just mill buildings; he created a mill village for the employees working in Piedmont’s mills. Overtime mill leaders would add to Piedmont’s landscape numerous buildings that housed and served the village and its inhabitants, including the building that would house the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA).


In 1880 the Union Church was built but after 1895, congregations no longer used the church.

later in 1908 there was a recognized need to house young single mill workers so mill leaders remodeled the Union Church to become the first structure built as a YWCA in South Carolina. Two women were hired to look after the welfare of the young women who lived on the second floor of the YWCA, keeping a watchful eye on the young residents. On the lower floor of the building, two large rooms were available for the girls to use; a sitting room with piano and a library.


The YWCA held social events, dances, and entertainment as well as educational activities in the form of presentations and classes. Many of the classes taught at the YWCA were on domestic skills such as sewing, nutrition, and cooking. And while this may seem an extraordinary effort in management of young female workers, this form of paternalistic management had deep roots in textile mill industry dating back to the early nineteenth century.


In 1820, Boston investors established what would be a model textile mill community in Lowell, Massachusetts. This also happened to be the first factory in the United States. Learning lessons from England where the British factory system represented extreme exploitation of employees and inhumane work conditions, the investors envisioned something different. Instead of using child labor as in England for its factory, Lowell Mills employed local girls from the surrounding farms. With this paternalistic mindset, the girls were housed in company boarding houses under the supervision of a matriarch. Mill girls not only worked in the mills but were encouraged to attend educational lectures hosted by the mill, as well as utilize the company library. Whether working or on their off time, the girls were closely watched by the matrons monitoring their behavior. They were prohibited from consuming alcohol, playing cards and gambling. The boarding house matron supervised their conduct ensuring the girls maintained proper moral behavior.


Despite what sounds oppressive, the mills girls were paid well for their labor, two to three times the wages of young women who did not work in the mill. The owners found this paternalistic oversight of the mill girls not only important for the welfare of the girls, but also

for the success of the mill factory itself. Paternalistic traditions played an important role in the development of not only Lowell’s Mills, but also in the future development of Piedmont’s YWCA nearly 100 years later. And yes, women mill workers were the first factory workers in America.

6 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


bottom of page