- Thomas Michael Holt
Thomas Michael Holt (
15 July 1831 –11 April 1896 ) was a prominent North Carolina industrialist who served asGovernor of North Carolina from 1891 to 1893.He was born in
Alamance County ,North Carolina ,July 15 ,1831 . [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=ZtQTD_fYUQcC&pg=PA190&dq=%22thomas+michael+holt%22 Biographical History of North Carolina from Colonial Times to the Present, Samuel A'Court Ashe, Charles L. Van Noppen, Greensboro, 1908] ] Holt studied at theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for one year before briefly moving to work in aPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania , dry goods store.In 1858, Thomas and his father,
Edwin M. Holt , acquiredBenjamin Trollinger ’s textile-manufacturing mill known as the “Granite Mill,” (located inHaw River , North Carolina). In 1861, Thomas acquired his father's interest in the mill and moved to Haw River to oversee the mill’s operations. (Edwin Michael Holt had formerly manfactured the so-called Alamance Plaids, the first cotton goods produced in the South on power looms. Edwin Holt established his Alamance Cotton Mill in 1837, thus beginning the Southern textile industry.) [ [http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/a/Alamance_Cotton_Mill.html Inventory of Alamance Cotton Mill, E.M. Holt papers, Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] ]In 1868, Thomas 's brother-in-law, Adolphus "Dolph" Moore, became business partners with Thomas and the operation was renamed Holt & Moore. In 1876, Moore was murdered, and the mills were consolidated as the
Thomas M. Holt Manufacturing Company . (Other members of the Holt family were operating the Haw River Mills, Glencoe Mills, Carolina Mill, Lafayette Mill, the Pilot Mill of Raleigh, and others in their expanding family empire.) [ [http://www.textilehistory.org/AlamanceCountyNC.html Textile History, Alamance County, N.C., textilehistory.org] ]After Thomas’s death in 1896, his son, Thomas Jr., took over operations of the mills and expanded them. In 1900, the mills were organized by a local
labor union , which sponsored a strike that was eventually broken by lockouts and mill housing evictions by the mill management.Thomas’s party affiliation was Democratic, and he served as a local magistrate, a county commissioner, as a member of North Carolina’s state senate (24th District) in 1876, as a member of North Carolina’s state house of representatives from Alamance County, 1883-1887, as
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina , 1889-1891, and upon the death of Governor (Daniel G. Fowle ), asGovernor of North Carolina , 1891-1893.As Governor, he was actively involved in establishing a new system of county government, in the construction of the Western North Carolina and the Cape Fear and Yadkin railroads as well as the North Carolina Railroad Company, and in increasing the funding for public schools, the University, and the state hospitals. He pushed for the establishment of an institution for the deaf at Morganton. An outstanding accomplishment was his getting the holders of bonds for the North Carolina Railroad to release the State from the lien on the State's shares. This saved the State money as the property was valued at more than $5 million. The Holt family had long ties to the railroad company, and these were undoubtedly useful in Holt's striking a deal with the bondholders.
Holt was aided in the burgeoning Holt family mill empire by his brother-in-law, James Nathaniel Williamson, who had married Thomas Michael Holt's sister Mary. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=ZtQTD_fYUQcC&pg=PA485-IA6&dq=%22james+nathaniel+williamson%22#PPA485-IA6,M1 James Nathaniel Williamson, Biographical History of North Carolina from Colonial Times to the Present, Samuel A'Court Ashe, Charles L. Van Noppen, Greensboro, N.C., 1908] ] The Holt family eventually became the largest textile barons in the state, running scores of different mills, under various names, and as various Holt heirs and their in-laws broke off from the main enterprise and founded their own companies. Ultimately, however, the Holt mills were sold by the family and became the backbone of the emerging Burlington Mills (later
Burlington Industries , overseen by rival industrialist Spencer Love.Thomas Holt died
April 11 , 1896 and is buried on the outskirts of Graham, Alamance County, North Carolina.References
External links
* [http://www.itpi.dpi.state.nc.us/governors/Holt.html Thomas Michael Holt]
* [http://www.rootsweb.com/~nchrha/History.htm A Brief History of Haw River, North Carolina]
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