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Arista Cotton Mill Complex, also known as Salem Cotton Manufacturing Company and Arista Cotton Mill (Fries Mill Complex) and Lentz Transfer & Storage Co., is a historic cotton mill complex located at Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina. The complex includes two buildings: a brick building built in 1836 by part of the Moravian ...
The Fries Cotton Mill (also known as the Fries Cotton and Woolen Mill, the Salem Cotton Manufacturing Company and F & H Fries Manufacturing Company) was a cotton mill in Salem, North Carolina, first erected in 1840. During the Civil War, the Fries Cotton Mill was an important supplier of wool and cotton goods to the Confederate Army. [1] [2] [3]
North of Winston-Salem on NC 65, SR 1611, 1628, and 1688; also roughly the area outside the original district west and north along Muddy Creek, south to Reynolda Rd., and east along Walker Rd. 36°10′51″N 80°20′16″W / 36.180833°N 80.337778°W / 36.180833; -80.337778 ( Bethania Historic
Jane Barnes Evans was a cotton Baroness and part owner of the North Carolina Railroad which ran through part of her Tall Pines Plantation which supplied fresh water to the North Carolina Railroad for the use of steam engine locomotives.
Salem Tavern; Salem Town Hall; Shamrock Mills; Shell Service Station (Winston-Salem, North Carolina) Christian Thomas Shultz House; Single Brothers' House; W. F. Smith and Sons Leaf House and Brown Brothers Company Building; John Wesley Snyder House; Sosnik-Morris-Early Commercial Block; South Trade Street Houses; Spruce Street YMCA
Arcadia Sawmill and Arcadia Cotton Mill: Milton FL 76001071 Archibald Mill: Dundas MN 78000836 Argo Tunnel and Mill: Idaho Springs CO 77000999 Arista Cotton Mill Complex: Winston-Salem NC 85000023 Arlington Mills Historic District: Lawrence and Methuen MA 06000205 Arndt's Pensaukee Sawmill Complex: Oconto WI 78000070 Arnold Mills Historic ...
1840 – Arista Cotton Mill and Fries Woolen Mills in business in Salem. [3] ... 1960 – Winston-Salem exceeds 100,000 for the first time. 1965
The mill made only yarn until 1893 when they began to produce fabrics as well. That was the year that they made the first Chatham Blanket. In 1895 the company started making wool suiting fabric and brought a tailor from New York to make suits. [2] In 1907 the Chatham Manufacturing company reorganized. They built another factory in Winston-Salem.