Hosiery in Alamance County
Alamance County
Hosiery Center


Cotton and hosiery knitting mill construction in Alamance County began with High Falls Mill in 1832.
Production began with Edwin Michael Holt and William Carrigan in 1837, with the start-up of the Alamance
Cotton Factory on the Big Alamance Creek.  During the ensuing years, mills sprang up all over the county.   By
1949, Burlington could claim the title “The Hosiery Center of the South” because of the concentration of
companies and plants located in the city and surrounding county. Fibers in use included cotton, rayon, silk and
nylon; all were knit into hose and half hose for men and women.

The first attempts to develop a hosiery industry in Burlington came at a time when cotton mills were in full
swing turning out yarn and converting the yarn to ginghams, denims and the famous Alamance Plaids.  Two
unsuccessful attempts were made with cylindrical hose, which required adding the separate shaped foot.  The
members of the Holt family traveled extensively and had since Edwin Michael Holt brought equipment to start
the Alamance Cotton Factory. The first hosiery operation was started in 1892 when Lafayette Holt, associated
with Lafayette Mills and a grandson of Edwin Michael Holt, was in Philadelphia and saw machines that
manufactured men’s hosiery. He brought back the first modern machines and started the first factory.  The
factory lasted only a year and yielded to the financial panic sweeping the country in the early 1890s.  That
factory closed and never reopened.

The
Daisy Hosiery Mill was built in Burlington in 1896 and became the first successful mill.  Little details are
preserved about other mills that opened during this time.  We do know that between 1908 and 1926, the Daisy
was joined by at least five other mills that survived:  Burlington Knitting Company, Whitehead Hosiery Mill, the
Sellars Hosiery Mill, the May Hosiery Mill, and the McEwen Knitting Mill.  McEwen was the first to produce full-
fashioned hosiery.

The 1909 City Directory listed Alamance, Brown’s, Daisy, Graham, Juvenile, May, Sellars and Standard.

In 1917, Daisy Hosiery became a foundation for May Hosiery Mills, Inc., which purchased a building on South
Main Street in downtown Burlington in 1917 and moved the operation there.  They also started a finishing plant
as an extension of its facilities. Later, May became May-McEwen and then May-McEwen-Kaiser Corporation.  In
1948, this historical operation became a division of the Burlington Mills.

The North Carolina Yearbook for 1922 and the Burlington Business Directory for 1921 listed the following
knitting mills in Alamance County:
Burlington:
Alamance Hosiery, 109 Hawkins phone 580-J, L I Young and W A Shoffner;

Brown’s Hosiery, Holt cor Tarpley, Wm W Brown, pres, W S Crawford v pres, W M Brown sec-treas;

Graham Hosiery Mills, Inc., Webb Av. cor Tucker, J S Frost , pres, J E Black, v-pres, sec-treas;

Juvenile Hosiery Mill, Park Ave cor Logan, Jno T & Colon R Love;

The May Hosiery Mills, Church cor Guthrie, Benj V & Wm H May;

Sellars Hosiery Mills, Tucker cor Morehead, D Ernest & Chas V Sellars, D E Sellars, mgr;

Standard Hosiery, East Webb Ave, John Shoffner manager;

Whitehead Hosiery Mills, 109 W Hawkins, phone 263, J W Murray, pres, R H Whitehead, sec-treas, and gen
mgr;

Gibsonville
Gibsonville Hosiery

Haw River
Best Hosiery, James Edward Best, Owner 4
Childrey Hosiery Mills, Wm H Childrey, propr.
Regina Hosiery ca. 1910-1930 Max Lieberman owner.  
Photos show three different buildings,
all identified as Regina 4
Riverside Hosiery Mills, Inc.,
J A Long, pres, R K Lasley, sec-treas.
Wilson Hosiery James Paul Wilson 4

Mebane
Durham Hosiery

John Shoffner (1895 –1944) began Standard Hosiery Mills in the village of Alamance, and took over the old,
rebuilt (1871) building of the original E. M. Holt Alamance Cotton Factory in 1926.  Standard used this building
for dyeing and finishing until 1947 when it closed. They demolished the building and saved original beams for
use in the mill at Kimesville.  The dyeing and finishing production moved to the original Aurora Cotton Mill
building on East Webb Avenue founded by Banks Holt.

















John Black established Esther, the first hosiery mill in Graham, on South Main Street in 1927.  Another mill,
Scott-Baker and Company, purchased the Sidney Cotton Mill in North Graham and converted it to hosiery
manufacture.  In 1949, there were six hosiery mills in operation in Graham.

The industrial guide of the Burlington Chamber of Commerce (1948) listed 50 manufacturers of hosiery and
related industrial products, in Alamance County.  Many of these were small plants devoted to one aspect of the
business, such as dyeing or yarn manufacture; some are divisions of larger hosiery companies.



Sources:

1)        Whitaker, W., 1949 “Centennial History of Alamance County 1849-1949,” Burlington Chamber of
Commerce, Burlington, NC.
2)        “North Carolina Yearbook 1922,” News & Observer Publishing Co., Raleigh, NC 1923.
3) Burlington, Graham, Haw River Business Directory Vol II 1921 Piedmont Directory Co., Asheville, Burlington,
NC  
4) Haw River Historical Museum, Haw River, NC
A playground plaque dedicated
1948 to John Shoffner in the
village of Alamance.

Photo: Gary Mock
Riverside Mills, Haw River, NC
Haw River Historical Museum, Gary Mock