Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory Collection Finding Aid MS097

Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory Collection Finding Aid MS097


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Local History and Special Collections Branch, Alexandria Library

717 Queen Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
Business Number: 703-746-1791
lhsc@alexlibraryva.org
URL: http://alexlibraryva.org/lhsc

Adrian Vaagenes

Repository
Local History and Special Collections Branch, Alexandria Library
Identification
MS097
Title
Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory Collection (MS097) 1866-1875
URL:
https://alexlibraryva.libraryhost.com/repositories/2/resources/68
Quantity
.142 Cubic Feet, 7 folders
Language
English .

Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

[Item identification], Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory Collection, MS097, Alexandria Library, Local History and Special Collections, Alexandria, Virginia


Biographical / Historical

In 1847, a group of Alexandria business owners William Fowle, Anthony Cazenove, Hugh Smith, Henry Daingerfield, William Gregory, John Withers, Pobert Jamieson, John C. Vowell, William Stabler, and Robert Miller proposed the founding of a cotton manufacturing industry for Alexandria. The enterprise began with the building of a four-story manufacturing plant, The Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory, on the corner of Oronoco and Washington, at what is now 515 N. Washington St. The business did not prosper, and was offered for sale in 1855 and was bought by Lewis McKenzie, John Withers, Robert Jamieson, James Green, Henry Daingerfield, and William Gregory. The business was again unsuccessful and was bought by John Rosencrantz of Philadelphia in 1858. The building was seized by the U.S. Federal government during the Civil War, 1963, and was used as a prison and later a barracks. After the war, Abijah Thomas tried to restart the plant, and entered into a deed of trust with C. Turnbull Baxter and Company, and borrowed money from the First National Bank of Alexandria to finance the restoration. Thomas failed, and the resulting legal issues surrounding the building reached the Supreme Court in 1875. In 1877, Robert H. Garrett of Baltimore, bought the company and shut it down so as to prevent competition with his flour company. The building has since exchanged many hands, serving as a bottling plant for the Robert Portner brewing company, a factory for the Express Spark Plug Factory, and an apartment complex.

Content Description

The collection consists of a deed, purchase proposals, business agreements, foreclosure notices, and fire insurance policies for the Mt. Vernon Cotton Factory.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

  • Business -- Virginia -- Alexandria
  • Business records

Container List

Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-1
Deed of Sale
1866 October 17
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-2
2nd Sale
1875
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-3
Foreclosure of Abijah Thomas
1866-1869
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-4
A.E. Addison proposal for purchase
1869 August 14
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-5
Advertisement, New York Journal of Commerce
1869
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-6
Qty. of 6 fire insurance policies
1870-1871
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-7
Agreement, A. Thomas & Turnbull & Co.
1868 February 18
Text Assorted Box: 02 folder: 97-8
Cotton Factory, Sale of/Advertising
1869-1875