Lenoir Cotton Mill - Lenoir City, TN
Posted by: Better Half
N 35° 47.461 W 084° 15.800
16S E 747328 N 3964225
Lenoir Cotton Mill ** (added 2002 - Building - #75001767)
Depot St., Lenoir City
Waymark Code: WM281B
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 09/19/2007
Views: 55
Lenoir Cotton Mill ** (added 2002 - Building - #75001767)
Depot St., Lenoir City
Historic Significance: Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer: Lenoir,William Ballard
Architectural Style: No Style Listed
Area of Significance: Architecture, Engineering, Commerce
Period of Significance: 1800-1824, 1825-1849
Owner: Local Gov't
Historic Function: Industry/Processing/Extraction
Historic Sub-function: Manufacturing Facility
Current Function: Vacant/Not In Use
The Lenoir City Cotton Mill was one of several mills built on Town Creek at Lenoir's Station by Major William B. Lenoir, the founder of Lenoir City. Lenoir came from North Carolina in 1810 and the cotton mill was built ca. 1821 for the manufacture of cotton yarns and batting. During the Civil War, the Union army burned the Lenoirs' general store and railroad depot, because the Lenoirs were Confederate sympathizers. The mill was threatened until Dr. Benjamin Ballard Lenoir moved among the Union army giving a secret Masonic handshake. The mill was spared and continued to operate as a cotton mill until the late nineteenth century. The Holston Manufacturing Company originated in the building, but later moved to the Bacon Hosiery Mill site. Then the mill was converted into a flour mill which operated until the 1950s. Because it was an early unique example of industrial architecture, the cotton mill was included in the Historic American Buildings Survey and was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. The Lenoir Cotton Mill Association was formed in 1980 by interested citizens and the American Studies Class at Lenoir City High School. The organization raised over $100,000 to stabilize and restore the historic structure, but it was burned by arsonists in 1991 destroying ten years of preservation efforts. A revised plan to continue the restoration was rejected by the Lenoir City Council, however the LCMA has preserved the mill ruins and are in the process in developing an interactive historic park. The site has now been placed on the "Walking Tour" of the historic sites in downtown Lenoir City.
Street address: Depot Street Lenoir City, TN USA 37771
County / Borough / Parish: Loudon County
Year listed: 2002
Historic (Areas of) Significance: Mill ruins surviving almost 200 years
Periods of significance: 1821 through the late 19th century
Historic function: Produced cotton
Current function: none
Privately owned?: no
Primary Web Site: [Web Link]
Season start / Season finish: Not listed
Hours of operation: Not listed
Secondary Website 1: Not listed
Secondary Website 2: Not listed
National Historic Landmark Link: Not listed
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Visit Instructions:
Please give the date and brief account of your visit. Include any additional observations or information that you may have, particularly about the current condition of the site. Additional photos are highly encouraged, but not mandatory.