Mill Engineers
Mill Engineers

There were a number of individuals and companies who were active in the design of cotton mills in the late
1800s and early 1900s.

W. B. Smith Whaley & Company
The Smith Whaley company began in South Carolina with offices in Columbia and diversified to the north with an
office in Boston, MA.  William Burroughs Smith Whaley was born in 1866 in Charleston, SC and was educated at
the Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ and graduated from Cornell University (1888) with a degree in
Civil Engineering.  The first mill attributed to Whaley was built in 1893 in Union, SC for Thomas C. Duncan. The
Union Cotton Mill was completed with 10,000 spindles and later expanded
The documentation can be read at the link below:
http://
www.nationalregister.sc.gov/MPS/MPS039.pdf
















The second mill designed and built by Whaley was the Courtenay Cotton Mill, Newry, Oconee County, SC.  It was
constructed in a typical New England textile factory design. Most of the buildings in Newry were built during the
period 1893-1910 and are examples of the turn-of-the century genre of mill village design in South Carolina.
These include the principal buildings of brick construction located adjacent to the town square, i.e., company
store and post office located on the north side, and mill office on the south side.

The South Carolina Department of Archives and History has done an outstanding job in featuring a number of the
mills and supporting villages around these mills designed by Smith Whaley.  The
Granby Mill was the second
mill to be built in Columbia.

Here is the
Kendall Mill in Camden.  This mill was designed in 1899 and constructed soon thereafter.
http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/kershaw/S10817728010/index.htm

The Buffalo Mill Historic District is significant as an excellent collection of historic resources associated with the
textile industry in South Carolina from the early-to-mid-twentieth century. The mill complex, including such
resources as the main mill, mill office, power house, ice factory, mill warehouse, company store, and company
bank/drug store, is a particularly intact collection of early-twentieth century mill and mill-associated buildings. It is
also significant for its association with W. B. Smith Whaley, a prominent engineer whose firm designed
numerous textile mills in the state, including mills in Camden, Columbia, Lancaster, Orangeburg, and Union.


Sources:
1.        Buffalo Cotton Mill, Buffalo, Union County, SC
http://
www.nationalregister.sc.gov/union/S10817744024/index.htm
The mill complex and village, together with their setting, represent perhaps the best extant example of a South
Carolina mill town.

2.Courtenay Cotton Mill, Newry, Oconee County, SC
http://
www.nationalregister.sc.gov/oconee/S10817737008/index.htm
Courtenay Mill was constructed in a typical New England textile factory design.

3.        Mills Mill, Greenville, SC
http:/
/www.nationalregister.sc.gov/greenville/S10817723027/index.htm
It was built by Captain Otis P. Mills after the formation of the Mills Manufacturing Company in 1894.

Other Engineering firms which designed mills

Robert and Company, Atlanta, GA
Founded in 1917, by Lawrence Wood "Chip" Robert, Jr., Robert and Company designed many tire cord and tire
fabric mills, especially in Georgia.
http://
www.robertandcompany.com/History.html

Arthur F. Gray, Boston, MA


















Lockwood, Greene and Company, Spartanburg, SC  Founded in 1882 in Providence, RI.  It is the nation's oldest
industrial engineering and construction company.  In 2003, it was acquired by CH2M Hill, Denver, CO, a global
leader in construction projects.
Trevor Anderson, Spartanburg, SC
Herald-Journal, January 8, 2007
http://
www.ch2m.com/corporate/clients/lg.asp

Monaghan Mill, Greenville, SC
http://
www.nationalregister.sc.gov/greenville/nrgreenville.htm
The main mill building, designed by Lockwood, Greene and Company, has a rectangular plan with four stories
over a basement. The mill is constructed of brick perimeter walls laid in common bond and heavy timber
framework. Cast iron columns support interior floors and are designed to carry the weight of heavy textile
machinery.
















Fred S. Hines, Boston, MA




















Charles T. Main, Boston, MA
























J.E. Sirrine and Co., Greenville, SC

Joseph E. Sirrine founded an engineering design firm in 1902.  Graduate of Furman.  Died August 7, 1947 at age
74. New York
Times, August 8, 1947.  



















An excellent biography may be found at the
web page North Carolina Architects and Builders.




The engineering firm was acquired in 1983 by CRSS, a large diversified engineering firm based in Houston, TX.

http://
www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/CRSS-INC-Company-History.html


Woodside Mill, Greenville, SC
http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/greenville/S10817723036/index.htm














According to reports in the New York Times, also designer of the Rosemary Manufacturing Co., Roanoke Rapids,
NC.

The J.E. Sirrine Textile Foundation endowment was set up in 1944 to honor J.E. Sirrine, whose firm designed
many of the cotton mills built in South Carolina in the early 20th century.  The Foundation was dissolved in 2005
with the monies ($6.1 million) divided by Clemson University and Tri-County Technical College, according to
Ellison S. "Smythe" McKissick III, former president of the foundation and chief executive officer of Alice
Manufacturing, Easley, SC.
Jim Duplessis
, The State, November 11, 2005.

OA Robbins operated a design and sales office in Charlotte.  He represented Kilburn, Lincoln & Co. of Fall River,
MA, manufacturers of looms.  He sold equipment to Glencoe Cotton Mills, Glencoe, NC.
















Benjamin A. Smith, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

















Ads Courtesy Peter Metzke
Postcards Courtesy Bill Wornall

Page Copyright Gary N. Mock 2008-2010
Right:  1901 ad for
Olympia, the
largest all-electric
mill



Left:
From a 1902
advertisement in
the
American Textile
Directory
Courtesy: Peter
Metzke
Other South Carolina
Mills
Robert and Company
Left: Posselt's Journal 1895

Right:
American Textile Journal
1913
American Textile Journal
1907
American Textile Journal
1922
American Textile Journal
1922
Stuart W. Cramer
Above:  Charlotte City Directory 1907

Right:  Posselt's Journal 1895

Courtesy of Peter Metzke
Ad from 1900
Rosemary Mill No. 3
near Roanoke Rapids, NC
Woodside Mill
Greenville, SC
Monaghan Mill
Greenville, SC