Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1. The Founding of Cannon Mills and Kannapolis: Paternalism Established
1. James William Cannon: Early Influences and the Emergence of a New South Industrialist
2. The Founding of Kannapolis: Expansion and Paternalism
3. Cannon Mills, Kannapolis, and Blacks: A Reflection of Racial Attitudes in the South
Part II. The Growth and Maturity of Cannon Mills and Kannapolis Paternalism Solidifies Amid Challenges
4. A Time of Upheaval: Progressivism and World War
5. Postwar Downturn, Labor Unrest, and New Management
6. New Leadership, Market Decline, and Consolidation
7. Paternalism Expanded: Charles Cannon and Welfare Work
8. The Great Depression, the New Deal, and Cannon Mills
9. Cannon Mills in World War II
10. Cannon Mills and Postwar America: Market Maturity and the Loss of Brand Loyalty
11. Cannon Mills and Operation Dixie
12. The Danger of Larger Forces: War, Imports, and Government Policies
Part III. The Decline of Cannon Mills and Paternalism
13. Cannon Mills in the 1960s: The Paternalistic Firm in a Modern World
14. The Civil Rights Movement, Federal Interference and the Weakening of Paternalism
15. Cannon Mills after Charles Cannon: New Leadership, Union Vote, and the Continuation of Paternalism
16. David Murdock, Modern Management, and the Demise of Paternalism
17. Fieldcrest Cannon, Pillowtex, Bankruptcy and the Return of David Murdock
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index