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Charles McClung McGhee

Charles McClung McGhee (January 23, 1828 – May 5, 1907) was an American industrialist and financier, active primarily in Knoxville, Tennessee. As director of the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway (ETV&G), McGhee was responsible for much of the railroad construction that took place in East Tennessee in the 1870s and 1880s. His position with the railroad also gave him access to northern capital markets, which he used to help finance dozens of companies in and around Knoxville. In 1885, he established the Lawson McGhee Library, which was the basis of Knox County's public library system.[2]

Charles McClung McGhee
Portrait from Notable Men of Tennessee (1905)
Born(1828-01-23)January 23, 1828
DiedMay 5, 1907(1907-05-05) (aged 79)
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Resting placeOld Gray Cemetery
Knoxville, Tennessee
OccupationBusiness
Spouses
  • Isabella McNutt White
  • Cornelia Humes White
Children6[1]
Parent(s)John McGhee and Betsey McClung
RelativesJames White (great-grandfather)
Charles McClung (grandfather)
George W. Baxter (son-in-law)
Lawrence Tyson (son-in-law)
Charles McGhee Tyson (grandson)

Historian Lucile Deaderick wrote that, "perhaps more than anyone else," McGhee "brought about and symbolized the Knoxville which developed in the last third of the nineteenth century."[3] A descendant of Knoxville's founders, McGhee established a pork packing operation during the Civil War.[4] After the war, he formed a syndicate that bought and merged two railroads into the ETV&G, gained control of several other railroads, and financed a railroad construction boom that connected Knoxville to most of the eastern United States.

McGhee established one of Knoxville's first suburbs, McGhee's Addition (now Mechanicsville), in the late 1860s and cofounded Knoxville Woolen Mills in 1884, at the time the city's largest employer. He also helped finance the Roane Iron Company (which established Rockwood) and cofounded the Lenoir City Company (which established Lenoir City).[4]

Early life edit

McGhee was born near modern Vonore in Monroe County, Tennessee, the youngest son of John McGhee and Elizabeth "Betsy" McClung McGhee. His father was a wealthy planter of Scots-Irish descent who owned roughly 15,000 acres (6,100 ha) of land in the Little Tennessee River valley.[2] His mother was a daughter of surveyor Charles McClung, who platted Knoxville in the early 1790s, and a granddaughter of Knoxville's founder, James White. McGhee spent much of his childhood moving back and forth between his father's plantation and Knoxville, where he spent a great deal of time with his mother's relatives.[4] In 1846, he graduated from East Tennessee University.[1] Upon his father's death, he and his brother, Barclay, inherited the family's plantation.[2]

Around 1860, McGhee relocated permanently to Knoxville. At the outbreak of the Civil War, McGhee pledged his support for the Confederacy and agreed to supply the Confederate States Army with bacon and other pork products. He was given the rank of colonel on the army's commissary staff, and for the rest of his life he was often referred to as "Colonel McGhee."[2] Confederate diarist Ellen Renshaw House wrote that during the Union Army's occupation of Knoxville in 1863, McGhee gave her scarce fabric with which she and her friends sewed blankets for Confederate prisoners of war.[5] Nevertheless, McGhee took the Oath of Allegiance and agreed to support the Union Army in 1864 and quickly mended ties with the city's Unionists.[4] McGhee also assisted a couple that had formerly enslaved by him, Handy and Evaline, and they took his last name as "he aided them materially in securing employment and starting them in life." Evaline McGhee died in Knoxville in 1905 at age 112.[6]

Railroads and other business interests edit

By the end of the war, McGhee had become one of Knoxville's leading businessmen. He helped establish People's Bank in 1865 and was appointed the bank's president the following year.[7] Around this time, McGhee and several associates organized a syndicate which purchased Knoxville's two main rail lines, the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad and the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad, and in 1869 merged the two into the ETV&G. As director of this railroad, McGhee became acquainted with numerous New York financiers, through which he gained funding for an acquisition of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad and the Knoxville and Kentucky Railroad. McGhee financed the extension of the latter to L&N lines in Ohio in 1883.[4]

Using his access to northern capital markets, McGhee financed numerous business ventures in the 1870s and 1880s, often in partnership with his long-time associate, Edward J. Sanford. McGhee financed the creation of the Knoxville Street Rail Company in 1875,[8] and in the early 1880s he secured $125,000 for the Roane Iron Company, which used the money to finance a massive steel-production operation.[9] In 1884, McGhee and Sanford cofounded the Knoxville Woolen Mills, which by 1900 included a 4.5-acre (1.8 ha) plant and employed 600 workers.[4][10] In 1889, McGhee and Sanford formed the Lenoir City Company and established Lenoir City, Tennessee, as a company town, which they hoped would grow into a manufacturing mecca.[9]

During the 1880s, McGhee and Sanford gained control of the Coal Creek Mining and Manufacturing Company, which operated coal mines in eastern Anderson County.[4] During the Coal Creek War of 1891–1892, McGhee and Sanford took a hardline stance against the miners, who were striking over the company's use of convict leasing. In letters to one another, McGhee and Sanford consistently complained about the state's ineffectiveness in handling the uprising.[11]

In the late 1860s, McGhee established a suburb in northwestern Knoxville known as "McGhee's Addition" for the city's growing working and middle classes.[12] Many of this suburb's early residents worked at the nearby Knoxville Woolen Mills or at the Knoxville Iron Company (formed by McGhee's future Roane Iron associate, Hiram Chamberlain). Now known as Mechanicsville, the neighborhood was annexed by Knoxville in 1883.[12]

In 1894, McGhee helped oversee the struggling ETV&G's transition into the Southern Railway, but he retired shortly afterward. He spent his later years travelling back and forth between his houses in Florida, Knoxville, and New York.[13] On May 5, 1907, McGhee died of pneumonia[13] and was interred in Old Gray Cemetery. The obelisk marking the McGhee family plot is among the tallest monuments in the cemetery.

Legacy edit

McGhee was a well-known philanthropist in Knoxville in his later years. In 1875, he helped secure funding for Knoxville's St. John's Orphanage,[2] which stood on Linden Street. In 1885, McGhee donated $50,000 for the establishment of the Lawson McGhee Library. Now part of the Knox County Public Library system, the building was named for McGhee's daughter, May Lawson McGhee, who had died suddenly in 1883. McGhee organized the library building so that its first floor could be rented out as commercial space and provide the library with steady income.[4]

McGhee's Knoxville mansion, built in 1872 at the corner of Locust Street and Union Avenue, was one of the first structures in the city designed by Joseph Baumann, whose architectural firm later designed many of the city's most prominent buildings. The mansion has been drastically modified to serve as a Masonic temple.[4][14] McGhee's son-in-law, Lawrence Tyson, was a World War I general and United States senator. McGhee Tyson Airport is named for McGhee's grandson (Tyson's son), World War I pilot Charles McGhee Tyson (1889–1918).[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Zella Armstrong, Janie Preston Collup French, Notable Southern Families Volume 1 (Chattanooga, Tenn.: Lookout Publishing Company, 1918), pp. 148-151.
  2. ^ a b c d e East Tennessee Historical Society, Mary Rothrock (ed.), The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: The Society, 1972), p. 448.
  3. ^ East Tennessee Historical Society, Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), p. 42.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i East Tennessee Historical Society, Lucile Deaderick (ed.), Heart of the Valley: A History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1976), pp. 24-27, 42-45.
  5. ^ Ellen Renshaw House, Daniel Sutherland (ed.), A Very Violent Rebel: The Civil War Diary of Ellen Renshaw House (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1996), pp. 17, 209.
  6. ^ "Oldest Person in City Dead - Evaline McGhee, Colored, Was 112 Years Old". Knoxville Sentinel. 1905-10-11. p. 11. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  7. ^ John Wooldridge, George Mellen, William Rule (ed.), Standard History of Knoxville, Tennessee (General Books, 2009), p. 161.
  8. ^ Standard History, p. 191
  9. ^ a b John Benhart, Appalachian Aspirations: The Geography of Urbanization and Development in the Upper Tennessee River Valley, 1865-1900 (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 2007), pp. 5-6, 40-41, 76.
  10. ^ Standard History, p. 136.
  11. ^ Karin Shapiro, A New South Rebellion: The Battle Against Convict Labor in the Tennessee Coalfields, 1871-1896 (Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1998).
  12. ^ a b Old Mechanicsville - History July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 18 June 2010.
  13. ^ a b The New York Times, 6 May 1907.
  14. ^ Lyons View Pike Historic District 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 18 June 2010.
  15. ^ Lawrence D. Tyson: Philanthropist 2010-06-10 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved: 18 June 2010.

Further reading edit

  • MacArthur, William Joseph Jr., "Charles McClung McGhee, Southern Financier," PhD diss., University of Tennessee, 1975.

charles, mcclung, mcghee, january, 1828, 1907, american, industrialist, financier, active, primarily, knoxville, tennessee, director, east, tennessee, virginia, georgia, railway, mcghee, responsible, much, railroad, construction, that, took, place, east, tenne. Charles McClung McGhee January 23 1828 May 5 1907 was an American industrialist and financier active primarily in Knoxville Tennessee As director of the East Tennessee Virginia and Georgia Railway ETV amp G McGhee was responsible for much of the railroad construction that took place in East Tennessee in the 1870s and 1880s His position with the railroad also gave him access to northern capital markets which he used to help finance dozens of companies in and around Knoxville In 1885 he established the Lawson McGhee Library which was the basis of Knox County s public library system 2 Charles McClung McGheePortrait from Notable Men of Tennessee 1905 Born 1828 01 23 January 23 1828Monroe County Tennessee United StatesDiedMay 5 1907 1907 05 05 aged 79 Knoxville Tennessee United StatesResting placeOld Gray Cemetery Knoxville TennesseeOccupationBusinessSpousesIsabella McNutt White Cornelia Humes WhiteChildren6 1 Parent s John McGhee and Betsey McClungRelativesJames White great grandfather Charles McClung grandfather George W Baxter son in law Lawrence Tyson son in law Charles McGhee Tyson grandson Historian Lucile Deaderick wrote that perhaps more than anyone else McGhee brought about and symbolized the Knoxville which developed in the last third of the nineteenth century 3 A descendant of Knoxville s founders McGhee established a pork packing operation during the Civil War 4 After the war he formed a syndicate that bought and merged two railroads into the ETV amp G gained control of several other railroads and financed a railroad construction boom that connected Knoxville to most of the eastern United States McGhee established one of Knoxville s first suburbs McGhee s Addition now Mechanicsville in the late 1860s and cofounded Knoxville Woolen Mills in 1884 at the time the city s largest employer He also helped finance the Roane Iron Company which established Rockwood and cofounded the Lenoir City Company which established Lenoir City 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Railroads and other business interests 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingEarly life editMcGhee was born near modern Vonore in Monroe County Tennessee the youngest son of John McGhee and Elizabeth Betsy McClung McGhee His father was a wealthy planter of Scots Irish descent who owned roughly 15 000 acres 6 100 ha of land in the Little Tennessee River valley 2 His mother was a daughter of surveyor Charles McClung who platted Knoxville in the early 1790s and a granddaughter of Knoxville s founder James White McGhee spent much of his childhood moving back and forth between his father s plantation and Knoxville where he spent a great deal of time with his mother s relatives 4 In 1846 he graduated from East Tennessee University 1 Upon his father s death he and his brother Barclay inherited the family s plantation 2 Around 1860 McGhee relocated permanently to Knoxville At the outbreak of the Civil War McGhee pledged his support for the Confederacy and agreed to supply the Confederate States Army with bacon and other pork products He was given the rank of colonel on the army s commissary staff and for the rest of his life he was often referred to as Colonel McGhee 2 Confederate diarist Ellen Renshaw House wrote that during the Union Army s occupation of Knoxville in 1863 McGhee gave her scarce fabric with which she and her friends sewed blankets for Confederate prisoners of war 5 Nevertheless McGhee took the Oath of Allegiance and agreed to support the Union Army in 1864 and quickly mended ties with the city s Unionists 4 McGhee also assisted a couple that had formerly enslaved by him Handy and Evaline and they took his last name as he aided them materially in securing employment and starting them in life Evaline McGhee died in Knoxville in 1905 at age 112 6 Railroads and other business interests editBy the end of the war McGhee had become one of Knoxville s leading businessmen He helped establish People s Bank in 1865 and was appointed the bank s president the following year 7 Around this time McGhee and several associates organized a syndicate which purchased Knoxville s two main rail lines the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad and the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad and in 1869 merged the two into the ETV amp G As director of this railroad McGhee became acquainted with numerous New York financiers through which he gained funding for an acquisition of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad and the Knoxville and Kentucky Railroad McGhee financed the extension of the latter to L amp N lines in Ohio in 1883 4 Using his access to northern capital markets McGhee financed numerous business ventures in the 1870s and 1880s often in partnership with his long time associate Edward J Sanford McGhee financed the creation of the Knoxville Street Rail Company in 1875 8 and in the early 1880s he secured 125 000 for the Roane Iron Company which used the money to finance a massive steel production operation 9 In 1884 McGhee and Sanford cofounded the Knoxville Woolen Mills which by 1900 included a 4 5 acre 1 8 ha plant and employed 600 workers 4 10 In 1889 McGhee and Sanford formed the Lenoir City Company and established Lenoir City Tennessee as a company town which they hoped would grow into a manufacturing mecca 9 During the 1880s McGhee and Sanford gained control of the Coal Creek Mining and Manufacturing Company which operated coal mines in eastern Anderson County 4 During the Coal Creek War of 1891 1892 McGhee and Sanford took a hardline stance against the miners who were striking over the company s use of convict leasing In letters to one another McGhee and Sanford consistently complained about the state s ineffectiveness in handling the uprising 11 In the late 1860s McGhee established a suburb in northwestern Knoxville known as McGhee s Addition for the city s growing working and middle classes 12 Many of this suburb s early residents worked at the nearby Knoxville Woolen Mills or at the Knoxville Iron Company formed by McGhee s future Roane Iron associate Hiram Chamberlain Now known as Mechanicsville the neighborhood was annexed by Knoxville in 1883 12 In 1894 McGhee helped oversee the struggling ETV amp G s transition into the Southern Railway but he retired shortly afterward He spent his later years travelling back and forth between his houses in Florida Knoxville and New York 13 On May 5 1907 McGhee died of pneumonia 13 and was interred in Old Gray Cemetery The obelisk marking the McGhee family plot is among the tallest monuments in the cemetery Legacy editMcGhee was a well known philanthropist in Knoxville in his later years In 1875 he helped secure funding for Knoxville s St John s Orphanage 2 which stood on Linden Street In 1885 McGhee donated 50 000 for the establishment of the Lawson McGhee Library Now part of the Knox County Public Library system the building was named for McGhee s daughter May Lawson McGhee who had died suddenly in 1883 McGhee organized the library building so that its first floor could be rented out as commercial space and provide the library with steady income 4 McGhee s Knoxville mansion built in 1872 at the corner of Locust Street and Union Avenue was one of the first structures in the city designed by Joseph Baumann whose architectural firm later designed many of the city s most prominent buildings The mansion has been drastically modified to serve as a Masonic temple 4 14 McGhee s son in law Lawrence Tyson was a World War I general and United States senator McGhee Tyson Airport is named for McGhee s grandson Tyson s son World War I pilot Charles McGhee Tyson 1889 1918 15 See also editEldad Cicero Camp Southern Terminal Knoxville TennesseeReferences edit a b Zella Armstrong Janie Preston Collup French Notable Southern Families Volume 1 Chattanooga Tenn Lookout Publishing Company 1918 pp 148 151 a b c d e East Tennessee Historical Society Mary Rothrock ed The French Broad Holston Country A History of Knox County Tennessee Knoxville Tenn The Society 1972 p 448 East Tennessee Historical Society Lucile Deaderick ed Heart of the Valley A History of Knoxville Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1976 p 42 a b c d e f g h i East Tennessee Historical Society Lucile Deaderick ed Heart of the Valley A History of Knoxville Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1976 pp 24 27 42 45 Ellen Renshaw House Daniel Sutherland ed A Very Violent Rebel The Civil War Diary of Ellen Renshaw House Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 1996 pp 17 209 Oldest Person in City Dead Evaline McGhee Colored Was 112 Years Old Knoxville Sentinel 1905 10 11 p 11 Retrieved 2023 07 10 John Wooldridge George Mellen William Rule ed Standard History of Knoxville Tennessee General Books 2009 p 161 Standard History p 191 a b John Benhart Appalachian Aspirations The Geography of Urbanization and Development in the Upper Tennessee River Valley 1865 1900 Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 2007 pp 5 6 40 41 76 Standard History p 136 Karin Shapiro A New South Rebellion The Battle Against Convict Labor in the Tennessee Coalfields 1871 1896 Chapel Hill N C University of North Carolina Press 1998 a b Old Mechanicsville History Archived July 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 June 2010 a b The New York Times 6 May 1907 Lyons View Pike Historic District Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 June 2010 Lawrence D Tyson Philanthropist Archived 2010 06 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 June 2010 Further reading editMacArthur William Joseph Jr Charles McClung McGhee Southern Financier PhD diss University of Tennessee 1975 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles McClung McGhee amp oldid 1187702987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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