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Collection Overview
| Size | 0.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 100 items) |
| Abstract | In 1978, the city of Durham's plan to construct a dam and reservoir on the Little River, which would eradicate the textile mill village of Orange Factory, eight miles north of Durham, motivated the people of the village to form the Orange Factory Preservation Society. They obtained nomination for the inclusion of Orange Factory on the National Register of Historic Places. As a result, the engineering company hired to build the dam financed an archeological investigation of the area and a social and economic historical study that included oral history interviews with Orange Factory inhabitants. The findings, however, were not considered sufficiently historically significant and, in 1983, Orange Factory's residents were moved to other homes and construction of the dam began. Transcripts of interviews conducted in April-May 1983 and a report written in August 1983 by Mary Ann McDonald, a graduate student in folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. McDonald was hired by Mid-Atlantic Archeological Research Inc., of Delaware. She interviewed five men and six women from Orange Factory, N.C., whose dates of birth ranged from 1892 to 1921, all of whom had worked in the Orange Factory mill. Topics of the interviews included physical layout of the mill and its surroundings; relations with co-workers and supervisors; local health care; midwifery; recreational activities, including hunting, fishing, dancing, and crafts such as quilting; religion; and the 1983 closing of the mill and why many people chose to remain in Orange Factory instead of going elsewhere. |
| Creator | McDonald, Mary Ann, collector. |
| Language | English |
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Information For Users
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Subject Headings
The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
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Biographical Information
The textile mill of Orange Factory, eight miles north of Durham, N.C., was built in 1852 on the Little River. It changed names several times as it changed owners, becoming the Willard Manufacturing Company sometime after the Civil War, the Little River Manufacturing Company in 1906, and the Laura Cotton Mill in 1916, a name it kept until it closed in 1938 at the height of the Depression. The population of the mill village, which retained the name of Orange Factory, dwindled then, but a number of its residents opted to stay there, either commuting to Roxboro where the mill's owners operated a larger facility, or trying to find other work.
In 1978, the city of Durham announced intentions to increase its water supply by constructing a dam and reservoir on the Little River, which would eradicate Orange Factory. The people of the village, linked by both blood ties and a strong sense of community, banded together to form the Orange Factory Preservation Society. Their efforts succeeded in a nomination for the inclusion of Orange Factory on the National Register of Historic Places. In accordance with that nomination, the engineering company hired to build the dam financed an archeological investigation of the area, and a social and economic historical study which included oral history interviews with Orange Factory inhabitants. However, findings were not considered sufficiently "historically significant." In late 1983, Orange Factory's people were moved to other homes, and construction of the dam began.
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Scope and Content
Mary Anne McDonald, a graduate student in folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was hired by Mid-Atlantic Archeological Research, Inc., of Delaware to conduct the oral history interviews and to write a report on the project for the City of Durham. This report, completed in August 1983, and the transcripts of the interviews, which were made in April and May 1983, constitute about two-thirds of this collection.
McDonald interviewed five men and six women, whose dates of birth ranged from 1892 to 1921. All had worked in the Orange Factory mill. They were asked about such topics as the physical lay-out of the mill and its surroundings; relations with co-workers and supervisors; local health care; midwifery; recreational activities, including hunting, fishing, dancing, and crafts such as quilting; religion; and the 1938 closure of the mill and why many people chose to remain in Orange Factory instead of going elsewhere. McDonald also prepared a rough draft of a topical index to the interviews.
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Series Quick Links
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Series 1. Oral History Interview Transcripts and Report.
Arrangement: alphabetical by name of interviewee.
Texts of the interviews (average length about 30 pages), including McDonald's typed notes and observations on each; her report, Oral History Studies at Orange Factory, which describes project objectives, procedures, and subject matter covered; and her handwritten index to the interviews.
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Series 2. Supplemental Information, 1899-1983.
Arrangement: by subject.
Materials compiled by McDonald during the course of the project, including lists of questions to ask; financial and procedural information; and such printed matter as articles on similar mill villages and about Orange Factory itself.
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Series 3. Audio Tapes.
Cassette tapes from which the Orange Factory Oral History interview transcripts were made. The tapes have been numbered so that they parallel the folder numbers of the transcripts.
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Series 4. Photographs, circa 1930s-1983.
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Subseries 4.1. Black and white photographs.
These fourteen images are copy prints of photographs belonging to the interviewees, mostly taken between 1945 and 1964. They depict various people and buildings in Orange Factory. McDonald's own descriptions of them follow.
Note: The Southern Historical Collection has added its own numbers, P-4381/1 through P-4381/13, to those assigned by McDonald: OF-1, OF-2, etc.
P-4381/1-13 are 17.5 x 12.5 cm.; P-4381/14 is 10 x 13 cm.
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Subseries 4.2. Color slides.
Scenes of people and places in Orange Factory, as well as photographs of pictures and documents belonging to the interviewees. All were taken by McDonald in April 1983.
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Subseries 4.3. Contact Sheets.
Copies of vintage prints and some contemporary pictures of Orange Factory people and places. Most of the images on Contact Sheet #2 were enlarged and are in Folder 1 of this series.
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Items Separated
Processed by: Laura O'Keefe, March 1985
Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008
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