On Monday, I spent a couple of hours in the Memphis and Shelby County room of the public library poring over the 1962 Polk's Memphis City Directory. I wanted to create a list, by address, of all the cotton companies that were located on Front Street in that year. Here is the list, which is rather long. The terms in parentheses are the description of the business as recorded in the directory. A linter is the fiber that stays on a cottonseed after the cotton is ginned. As far as I've been able to tell in my reading, a buyer is a company that purchases and takes ownership of cotton from a farmer; in contrast, a broker is a company that simply sells cotton on a farmer's behalf. A factor, at least in the nineteenth century, was a company that loaned money to a farmer so he could buy seed and equipment to grow the crop; in return, the farmer not only repaid the loan (with interest) but gave the factor exclusive rights to sell his cotton on his behalf. I don't know precisely what the term dealer meant and how a dealer differed from a buyer or broker. Sometimes the term listed in the directory was simply cotton; I omitted it in those cases.
At the time, the biggest cotton companies in Memphis were probably Anderson Clayton (at 2 S. Front Street), Weil Brothers (93-95 S. Front Street), Allenberg (104 S. Front Street), and Hohenberg (266 S. Front Street). Of those four, Allenberg and Hohenberg were headquartered in Memphis; the two are still in business, their headquarters now on Goodlett Farms Parkway in Cordova. Allenberg still does business under that name, although they are owned by Louis Dreyfus. Hohenberg was sold to Cargill in 1975 and today operates as Cargill Cotton. Another company that would over the next thirty years become one of the largest in the world was W. B. Dunavant and Co. In 1971, Dunavant became Dunavant Enterprises and moved to a new, modern office at 3797 New Getwell Road. In 2010 Dunavant, which now is located at 959 Ridgeway Loop Road in Memphis, sold its cotton business to longtime rival Allenberg.
At the time, the biggest cotton companies in Memphis were probably Anderson Clayton (at 2 S. Front Street), Weil Brothers (93-95 S. Front Street), Allenberg (104 S. Front Street), and Hohenberg (266 S. Front Street). Of those four, Allenberg and Hohenberg were headquartered in Memphis; the two are still in business, their headquarters now on Goodlett Farms Parkway in Cordova. Allenberg still does business under that name, although they are owned by Louis Dreyfus. Hohenberg was sold to Cargill in 1975 and today operates as Cargill Cotton. Another company that would over the next thirty years become one of the largest in the world was W. B. Dunavant and Co. In 1971, Dunavant became Dunavant Enterprises and moved to a new, modern office at 3797 New Getwell Road. In 2010 Dunavant, which now is located at 959 Ridgeway Loop Road in Memphis, sold its cotton business to longtime rival Allenberg.
22-26 N. Front Street (Falls Building)
- Max D. Lucas and Co. (cotton linters)
- Trammell and Co. (cotton linters)
- William C. Manley Jr. (cotton linters)
- Bill C. White (cotton linters)
- Stapleton Linters
- Harold Holt Co. (cotton linters)
- Railway Supply and Manufacturing Co. (cotton linters)
- Cotton Warehouse Inspection Service
- W. M. Rootes and Co. (cotton linters)
- Brode Corp. (cottonseed products)
- William S. Roberts Jr. (cotton ginner)
- Anderson Clayton and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Mid South Cotton Growers Association
- Frank Oakes and Co.
- Fulton and Sons
- Covington and Smith Co. of Mfs. [Manufacturers?] Cotton
- Alex L. Bernstein (cotton brokers)
- John A. Lyons Jr. (cotton brokers)
- Cotton Boll Liquor Store
- Cotton Row Café
- Staple Cotton Cooperative Association
- William R. Copeland and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Ramsey-Austin Cotton Co. (brokers)
- Clarence Hossley and Co.
- John R. Williamson and Co.
- Malcolm L. Wilson (cotton broker)
- Bradshaw Cotton Co. (buyers)
- F. M. Crump and Co. (cotton brokers)
- Austin Brothers Co.
- Williams Cotton Co.
- Dudley S. Weaver and Co. (cotton buyers)
- W. B. Bridgforth and Co. (cotton dealers)
- Riverside Cotton Sales Inc.
- John C. Weaver Co.
- Richards Cotton Co. (cotton brokers)
- E. F. Creekmore and Co. (cotton buyers)
- W. L. Ford and Co. (cotton brokers)
- Wesson and Co.
- Mfs. [Manufacturers?] Cotton Sales (office)
- Goodbody and Co. (cotton brokers)
- A. W. Grimming Cotton Co.
- May Sternberger and Co. (cotton brokers)
- Cotton Exchange Café
88 S. Front Street (building no longer extant--unless this was an address in the Cotton Exchange Building)
- De Soto Cotton Co.
- Herbert Esch and Co.
- John Hopkins and Co.
- Newbern and Co.
- George M. Darms
- John V. Welch
- O'Neal Cotton Co. (buyers)
- John A. DuPre and Co. (cotton dealer)
- Lytle-McKee Cotton Co. (brokers)
- Taylor Cotton Co.
- A. R. Wetenkamp and Co.
- George S. Peyton and Co.
- Barnwell and Hayes (cotton buyers)
- Patton Brothers Inc (cotton brokers)
- Weil Brothers Cotton Inc. (buyers)
- Carl-Lee Cotton Co. (buyers)
- Lloyd N. Judson
- R. W. Luke Holland (buyer)
- Herman J. Inderbitzen
- Kyle Patton and Co.
- Columbia Compress Co.
- Duncan and Sims Co.
- Charles M. Parker Cotton Co.
- D. O. Andrews and Co. (cotton exporters)
- Allenberg Cotton Co. (buyers)
- Hugh E. Tucker and Co. (cotton brokers)
- A. S. Byrd Cotton Co. (dealers)
- D. D. Dumas and Co. (cotton brokers)
- Southern Cotton Co-op Association
- Horace E. Jester
- L. Gordon Yancey Cotton Co.
- James C. Hill and Co.
- Ben F. Hill Cotton Co.
- D. L. McDonald Cotton Co.
- Crawford and Co.
- McAdams and Co.
- Sam Parker
- J. L. Mercer and Co. (cotton factors)
- Sledge and Norfleet Co. (cotton factors)
- R. A. Armistead and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Day Brothers Cotton Co. (dealers)
- Hubert N. Stovall (cotton brokers)
- Robert M. Day (cotton brokers)
- C. W. Hussey and Co.
- Nebhut Cotton Co. (exporters)
- Bluff City Cotton Co. (brokers)
- J. J. Powers and Co. (cotton dealers)
- Jones-Beal Inc. (cotton dealers)
- Larkin-Hinkel Cotton Co. (buyers)
- Chickasaw Cotton Co. (dealers)
- James H. Cobb (cotton broker)
- Junius D. Hobson (cotton brokers)
- C. L. Andrews Cotton Co. (buyers)
- Arlie C. Brooks (cotton shipper)
- Boeving Brothers Cotton (cotton ginners)
- W. B. Dunavant and Co.
- F. Eug Cau
- C. M. Austin Co.
- Reese E. Austin (broker)
- T. H. Austin Cotton Co. (buyers)
- F. G. Barton Cotton Co. (cotton factors)
- Berry B. Brooks (cotton broker)
- Charles R. Cash
- E. Hope Brooks (cotton broker)
- Graves-Beasley Inc.
- Beasley ACT and Co.
- Crespi Cotton Co. (buyers)
- W. D. Lawson and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Thomas H. Todd and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Molloy H. Miller Co. (cotton dealers)
- Ted I. Lewis (cotton dealer)
- Cannon Mills Inc. (cotton-buying office)
- Murff and Co. Inc. (cotton buyers)
- L. T. Barringer and Co. (cotton buyers)
- S. Y. West and Co. (cotton buyers)
- Hohenberg Brothers. Co. (brokers)
Going through my old souvenirs I came across a Covington and Smith clothing brush - an advertising freebie. I remember my first job was working down on Cotton Row for FM Crump and Company.
ReplyDeleteHave you done any research on the weaver companies?
ReplyDeleteI have a sign from Taylor Cotton Co. Commission Merchants.Glass with gold lettering with black shadowing.
ReplyDeleteI saw the hooks the sign hung from on Front St.