MILL MOTHERS: field notes

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Loray tower, Christmas Day 2011

Posted by Kim Church at 5:00 PM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Loray Mill
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Mill Mother's Song, a novel in progress by Kim Church

Mill Mother's Song is set during the Gastonia textile strike of 1929, a seminal struggle in labor history, yet one that is little talked about.

At the turn of the twentieth century, the textile industry was booming in the South. Mill jobs were abundant; mill towns offered creature comforts and social amenities that attracted families looking to escape the poverty and hardship of farm life.

The end of World War I brought an end to the textile boom. Demand for cotton goods plummeted; prices fell. Mill owners intent on maintaining wartime profits began to implement the "stretch-out," a system of management that cut jobs, imposed stringent production quotas on the workers who remained, and paid them less. Workers were stretched to their breaking point. The mills, many owned by absentee companies that had no personal relationships with workers, became fertile ground for unions.

In 1929, the Communist-affiliated National Textile Workers Union set out to organize the Loray Mill in Gastonia, then the largest cotton mill in "the fine combed cotton capital of the world." That April, 1,800 Loray workers walked out on strike, sparking a violent backlash among Gastonia's ruling class.

Mill Mother's Song is the story of Lena Sparks and Rae Wilder, born on the same day in the same valley in Burke County, North Carolina, and raised as sisters. They leave the mountains to work in cotton mills. At the time of the strike, both are young mothers, both fueled by a sense of duty, though with different notions of what their duty entails.

The strike is met with a brutality that tests the mettle of workers on both sides of the picket line, and tests the sisterly bond between Lena and Rae.


About Kim Church

My debut novel, Byrd (Dzanc Books, 2014), is the fragmented family history of a child secretly given up for adoption. The book won the Crook's Corner Book Prize for best debut novel set in the South and the Independent Publisher Book Award Bronze Medal for literary fiction. It was a Chautauqua Prize finalist, a Balcones Prize finalist, and was long-listed for the SIBA Book Award and the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize from the Center for Fiction.

My short stories have appeared in Shenandoah, Painted Bride Quarterly, Mississippi Review, the Norton anthology Flash Fiction Forward, and elsewhere.

I have received fiction fellowships from the North Carolina Arts Council and residencies at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Millay Colony for the Arts, and Vermont Studio Center. For more information please visit my website.

Mill Mothers' Song was inspired by my grandmother, who worked all her life in cotton mills.



All content copyright © Kim Church. All rights reserved.

Blog Archive

  • ►  2024 (1)
    • ►  June (1)
  • ►  2015 (1)
    • ►  September (1)
  • ▼  2012 (1)
    • ▼  January (1)
      • Loray tower, Christmas Day 2011
  • ►  2011 (4)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2010 (7)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (6)
Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.