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| Sponsored
by: Virginia Department of Transportation
Research
by: «ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
Today Danvilles citizens work in an increasing variety of occupations. But not very long ago, millworkers made up most of the citys labor force. In fact, at the start of the twentieth century, Danville had the largest textile industry in the South. Danvilles prominence today is largely a product of the men and women who labored in those mills from the late nineteenth century onward. Until the 1950s, most millworkers and their families lived in company-owned housing, both in the well-known planned village called Schoolfield or other less formal neighborhoods like Front Street in North Danville. Though much has been written about Schoolfield and Southern mill towns, history offers us a confused picture of what life was really like for the families who lived there. Between ideal visions of company welfare and more bleak accounts of poor, dependent families, we are left to wonder where the quality of life stood between these two extremes. One way to learn more about the story of Danvilles mill workers is through archaeology. When the rehabilitation of Main Street Bridge was planned, the Virginia Department of Transportation had to consider the impact it would have on historic or archaeological sites. Two significant sites on lots with former mill houses were discovered along Front Street. The College of William and Marys Center for Archaeological Research was chosen by VDOT to complete the final, most intensive stages of archaeological excavations. Over several decades beginning in the 1890s, mill worker families had left behind archaeological traces of their living conditions in the form of household trash and disturbances in the soil from outhouses, trenches, and foundations. Using this archaeological evidence along with documentary research and recollections of elderly residents, we saw a more vivid picture of what life was life for these key actors in the story of Danvilles past. This website describes the research, how and why it was done, and what it tells us about the lives of mill families. From most of the main pages, listed in the box above right, you can link to secondary pages with more detailed information. Also, be sure to click on pictures for a larger view and detailed explanation. Besides presenting this story through our words and pictures, we invite you to contribute as well. We have linked a guestbook to the Recollections page where you can add your own chapter to the story of Danvilles millworkers, or simply post comments about the project and the website. Journey back in time with us as we explore this forgotten era! |
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Why Archaeology? | The Process | History | Findings | Millworker Life | Recollections | HOME |
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