Bessemer City, North Carolina: The Ballad Singer the Mill Bosses Couldn't Silence
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Bessemer City, North Carolina. September 14th, 1929. A flatbed truck kicks up Red Carolina dust on a back road outside Bessemer City. The boards rattle beneath 22 pairs of feet. No one in the truck bed carries a weapon. They are textile workers heading home from a roadblock that turned them around. They did what they were told. They turned back, and the cars behind them kept coming. In that truck bed, gripping the wooden side rails, a 29-year-old woman feels the September heat press against her skin.
TIMELINE
1900: in the southern Appalachian Mountains.
1929: A flatbed truck kicks up Red Carolina dust on a back road outside Bessemer City.
1935: and ran as a non-union shop until it closed in 1993.
1986: North Carolina proposed a historical marker near the Loray Mill.
WHY THIS MATTERS
The story of Bessemer City is a reminder that the events that shaped America didn't always happen in the biggest cities. What unfolded here left marks on the community that are still visible today. The full story is more complicated, and more human, than the version most people know.
Episode 200 | Hometown History | Hosted by Shane Waters
If you liked this: Episode 168 (Hickory, North Carolina)
Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-history
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