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"Application for a Situation with Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills [for F. W. Lake]"
Date: 1918 April 12
Document Type: Application
Unique ID: ms004-254
Description: This document provides an example of the employment application used by Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills.
"Average Weekly Earnings of Some Family Groups"
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Notes
Unique ID: ms004-053
Description: This document details the average weekly earnings of families employeed by Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills.
[Draft of statement on child labor]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-056
Description: In this statement, the company claims that no child under the age limit of 14 and a half years was hired by Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills after the passage of the Child Labor Act. The company also states that at the time of the May 1914 strike, only 16 children between the ages of 12 and 14 were employed by the Mills. The company also denies the truth of reports that a 10 year old boy named Milton Nunally worked at the Mills. The statement claims that his mother falsified his age when he was hired. The boy was eventually fired for mischief.
[Draft of statement on education]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-059
Description: In this statement, the company describes its policies regarding the education of the workers employed by the Mill.
[Draft of statement on hours]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-057
Description: In this statement, the company claims that working hours have been 60 hours per week since January 1, 1912.
[Draft of statement on housing and commissary]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-060
Description: In this statement, the company describes its policies regarding company-provided housing and the company commissary.
[Draft of statement on savings]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-058
Description: In this report, the company describes its encouragement of employees to save money, and cites a specific example of a pair of weavers, S. J. Jenkins and his wife.
[Draft of statement on the Wesley House and dining hall]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-061
Description: In this statement, the company describes the "Wesley House" hotel run by the Mills, and the company-provided dining hall.
[Excerpt of a petition for police protection from strikers by employees of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills]
Date: ca. 1914
Document Type: Petition
Unique ID: ms004-114
Description: In this petition, workers from Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills ask the Atlanta police for more protection, claiming they are being disturbed and harrassed by strikers. Original item has 24 pages. Only the first page has been scanned.
Fifth Floor Plan, Mill No. 1
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Date: 1918 April
Document Type: Architectural Drawing
Unique ID: ms004-273
Description:
Letter from F. W. Stockmar, Railway Audit and Inspection Company to Charles E. White, Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills
Date: 1921 April 21
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: ms004-250
Description: In this letter, F. W. Stockmar informs C. W. White of a new detective agency and assures him that the Railway Audit and Inspection Company wants to keep working with Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills.
Letter from Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills to James L. Beavers, Chief of Police, Atlanta
Date: 1914 November 25
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: ms004-089
Description: In this letter, the management of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills requests additional police presence at the Mill during the strike.
Letter from Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills to James S. Alexander, National Bank of Commerce
Date: 1914 July 03
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: ms004-120
Description: In this letter, the management of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills attempts to persuade Atlanta's business community leaders that the Men and Religion Movement's leaders are acting in a way detrimental towards local business and industry.
Letter from Thomas S. Florence, Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, to T. Grady Head, State Revenue Comissioner
Date: 1938 July 06
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: ms004-256
Description: In this letter, Thomas S. Florence asks the Georgia State Revenue Commissioner for his support in the removal of a liquor store near the mill village.
Letter from the Cue Cluck Rangers to Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills
Date: 1922 July 26
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: ms004-231
Description: This letter, from an anonymous group most likely associated with the Ku Klux Klan, mentions the Leo Frank case.
"List of Foreign-Born People Working with Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, Atlanta, GA"
Date: [1917]
Document Type: Census
Unique ID: ms004-251
Description: This report lists all foreign-born employees of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills in Atlanta at the time of World War I.
[Memo concerning Operative #16 and Sara Conboy]
Date: 1915 May 04
Document Type: Memo
Unique ID: ms004-185
Description: This memo states that labor leader Sara Conboy was calling off the strike, and dispersing most of the strikers, leaving some to continue recruiting for the union.
[Memo concerning Operative #16 and burning Governor Slaton in effigy]
Date: 1915 June 25
Document Type: Memo
Unique ID: ms004-189
Description: In this memo, an operative describes the intent of strikers to burn an effigy of Georgia Governor John M. Slaton.
"Memo of Discussion Held with Mr. McWade and Mr. Colpoys"
Date: 1914 November 27
Document Type: Memo
Unique ID: ms004-117
Description: This memo describes the policies of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, including contract employment, fine, wages, sanitary conditions, and welfare work.
Mill No. 1 Piping and Wiring: 1st and 2nd Floor Wiring
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Date: 1927 June 13
Document Type: Architectural Drawing
Unique ID: ms004-271
Description:
Mill No. 1 Piping and Wiring: 3rd and 4th Floor Wiring Plans
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Date: 1927 June 21
Document Type: Architectural Drawing
Unique ID: ms004-272
Description:
[Notes on witnesses]
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Notes
Unique ID: ms004-062
Description: This list contains the names of the witnesses who will testify before the Commission of Industrial Relations as well as summaries of their testimonies.
"Notices Given June 8/14"
Date: 1914 June 08
Document Type: Notes
Unique ID: ms004-050
Description: These notes list workers who quit the Mill on June 8, 1914.
Power Plant
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Date: 1907 November 16
Document Type: Architectural Drawing
Unique ID: ms004-269
Description:
Power Plant - Mach. Plans: Mach. and Piping Plan of 2nd Floor and Pump Room
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Date: 1927 March 31
Document Type: Architectural Drawing
Unique ID: ms004-270
Description:
"Report from Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, Atlanta GA"
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Report
Unique ID: ms004-063
Description: This report describes working conditions at the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, including stastics, hours of operation, pay, benefits, and contract terms. NOTE: This item is a large sheet of paper. It has been scanned in quarters. The last page is slightly cropped at the top, due to the folds of the original pages.
"Reward!"
Date: ca. 1914
Document Type: Flyer
Unique ID: ms004-054
Description: The flyer offers a one hundred dollar reward for information resulting in the arrest and conviction of the persons responsible for assaulting Howard Sims, a Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills worker.
[Statement on strikes at the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill in Altanta, Georgia]
Date: 1914 December 15
Document Type: Statement
Unique ID: ms004-090
Description: In this statement, the management of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills defends itself against allegations of the strikers in the areas of fines, wages, sanitary conditions, welfare work, kindergarden, and the tent colony.
"Summary of Village Census 1936"
Date: 1936
Document Type: Census
Unique ID: ms004-259
Description: This report summarizes the census of the 1936 census of the mill village in Cabbagetown.
"The Mote in Your Neighbor's Eyes, the Beam in Your Own"
Date: ca. 1915
Document Type: Draft
Unique ID: ms004-065
Description: In this statement, the management of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills defends the companies against what it sees as unjust attacks upon it by the Men and Religion Movement.

[Reproduction of a letter from Lola Church to Oscar Elsas]
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Date: [1915 March 05]
Document Type: Letter
Unique ID: vam004-019
Description: In this letter, Lola Church asks Oscar Elsas for her job at the Mill back after leaving during the strike. She claims that Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills "have better treatment, better pay and lighter work than any other work shop." She also states she "has no use for" the Union and gives the Mills permission to publish her letter.