Gant Family, Alamance County, NC


The first member of the Gant family to immigrate to the United States was Thomas Gantt who arrived in
Maryland from England in 1654.  The family descended from John of Gaunt lineage.  By 1746 two bothers of
Thomas, Edward and John, were living in Granville County, North Carolina.  Later, their descendents moved to
Orange County, North Carolina.  Isham Gant owned a farm on the Haw River and built and owned one of the
first “Grist” mills on the river.  His son, Jesse was born in 1803 and was later known as Col. Jesse Gant.  
Jesse was a Colonel in the North Carolina militia.  Jesse had a son John Q. Gant who went to work with Edwin
M. Holt at the Alamance Cotton Factory and worked as a clerk.  He participated in the restoration of the burned
cotton mill in 1871.  “New” plaids were manufactured in 1872. 1

The Yellow Store. “On September 29, 1874 a deed drawn up between the North Carolina Rail Road Company
and J. Q. Gant & Co., a newly organized firm which consisted of two Holt brothers, Lawrence S. and L. Banks,
and an active partner, John Q. Gant, all listed as men of Company Shops, NC, which is now Burlington.” 1, p21  
A large yellow building was built on Main Street and became a mercantile center for Company Shops.

Marriage.  After a courtship of nearly two years, John Gant married Corinna Morehead Erwin of Morganton, NC,
on April 15, 1879.  A wedding trip took them to New York and the St. Nicholas Hotel where they spent $42.80 for
four days with the luxuries of fires and a bathroom. 1










Altamahaw Cotton Mill. It is not known just how John Q. Gant and Berry Davidson became acquainted or how
they decided to go into the cotton mill business together.  In 1880, Davidson, a well-known millwright, built the
Altamahaw Cotton Mill in partnership with John Q. Gant.  Gant, who worked for Edwin M. Holt in the 1870s,
probably met Davidson when he rebuilt the Holt’s Alamance Cotton Mill in 1871. 1p30.  The issue of The
Alamance Gleaner of April 14, 1880 mentions a new factory underway at Davidson’s mills.  The mills already
on the premises were saw and grist mills and some wool carding machinery. P31.  The new mill was finished
no later than November 1880.  As for the mill, a site “… on the north bank of Haw River, two miles from the
Guilford line …had been selected…the greatest fall…of any place on the river, half a mile.”… will have twenty-
one to twenty-two feet head… and give one hundred fifty to two hundred horse power.”  In December 1884,
Lawrence and L. Banks Holt bought Mr. Davidson’s interest in the cotton mill. 1

“The old ice house at Altamahaw…was a great hole…dug about 15 or 20 feet deep and about 35 feet square.  
Pine poles…made the walls and there was a roof over the entire structure.  In the fall, the old leaves and saw
dust were taken out and a fresh layer put down.  When the duck pond froze over in the winters the ice was
harvested…often seven to ten inches of ice.” 1, p40-41.

Ossipee Cotton Mill.  James N. Williamson ran the mill located on a branch of the Haw near the Altamahaw
Mill.  Williamson often raced his horse, “Defender” to Ossipee, from a meeting point north of Graham where he
lived.  He would meet John Q. Gant on his way from Burlington to the Altamahaw Mill and race between friends
was on.  In 1888, a railhead was built at Mill Point 4 ½ miles west of Burlington for the two mills.  

Telephone lines run between 1886 and 1890 connecting Altamahaw with the Gant house in Burlington and the
depot at Mill Point.  The building in Altamahaw was the new office of Holt, Gant & Holt erected in 1890…”a very
handsome structure.  The front faces west and the northern side of the building, the word “OFFICE” stands out
in cream-colored brick against red. 1 p45.

Mr. Gant often slept in a bedroom over the office on days he did not commute from Burlington.  Commuting on a
daily basis was highly impractical before the automobile…p48.

The mill was very impressive – 6,500 spindles, 300 looms, 42 cards and 225 operatives consumed 3250
bales of cotton per annum. Until 1918 when the first truck was bought, goods were hauled by horse and mule-
drawn wagons on dirt roads to the railhead west of Burlington. 1 p52.

Glen Raven Cotton Mills Company.  By 1900, John Q. Gant had acquired land west of the city of Burlington to
build a mill and village…he wanted his new mill to be close enough to home to eliminate the commuting…the
land which is the major portion of the current (1977) Glen Raven Mills property in Glen Raven, North Carolina.  
The land is further west than Gant wanted but he was unable to persuade the Holts to sell land nearer to town.

1902-1920. Each of the eight sons born to John Q. and Corinna Gant join the family business at least for a
short time.

1902 Joseph E. and Kenneth join John Q. to form Glen Raven

1906 John, Jr. graduates UNC and joins Glen Raven

1913 Roger and Edwin join Glen Raven
    Kenneth moves to Neuse Manufacturing, Raleigh

1916 Edwin leaves Altamahaw for Neuse and Russell joins Altamahaw

1918 Joe leaves Holt, Gant & Holt

1920 Allen joins Glen Raven












1930.  John Q. Gant dies and management passes to sons Roger and Allen

1960 Roger Gant dies business partner of Allen Gant for 40 years.
Allen E. Gant named President of Glen Raven; Russell Gant named Chairman of Board

1972 Allen E. Gant Dies July 25, 1972
Roger Gant, Jr. named President

Allen E. Gant, Jr. President



Reference:  
Gant, Margaret Elizabeth,
The Raven's Story, Glen Raven Mills, Glen Raven, NC, 1979.
Left:  Zebra Stripes - first trademark issued
to Glen Raven for black and white awning
stripe fabric  1908

Right:  Allen Gant, John Q. Gant,
and Roger Gant 1920.

Images:
The Raven's Story
John Q. Gant and Corinna in
Philadelphia on their bridal tour
April, 1879

Source:
The Raven's Story
Home
Glen Raven Inc.
Roger Gant, Jr.,
Retired President
Glen Raven
January 2008
Photo: Gary Mock