TARBORO —
Boyce Owens of Taboro, recalled working at the old Long Manufacturing Co. in Tarboro and earning 75 cents an hour. He remembered making hay bailers, tractors and other farm equipment in the buildings that housed one of the first manufacturing companies in town.
Soon, those buildings will be just memories for Owens and other former employees as they are in the process of being demolished.
Advanced Demolition and Recycling, of Raleigh, is knocking down three of the buildings that total approximately 250,000 square feet. By tearing the buildings down, owner Montana Tractors of Rogers, Ark., will reduced its tax liability on the property, currently assessed at $1,399,979.
For Montana Tractors, the demolition is sweet, but for Owens and many of Long's former employees, it's bitter.
"I don't like the idea," Owens said. "But I guess they got the use out of them and there's nothing else to do."
Owens, 79, began working at Long in 1954 and retired 32 1/2 years later. He recalled the owner, William “Bill” Long, began making small farm equipment at his house before starting up the operation in town. Owens soon joined him.
"I left the farm making 40 cents an hour to work at Long making 75 cents an hour," he said. "That was good back in them days.
"Everybody was so friendly — we were like brothers. I enjoyed it. I would go back and work 32 more years if I could. The Longs were very nice to me."
By the 1970s, Long's employment peaked at 1,100 employees in Tarboro and another 400 in Davenport, Iowa. Long also had warehouses in South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Ohio and Canada.
"We were really big at that time," said Frank Hale, who worked for Long for 21 years. "I was a truck driver and I used to drive to the warehouses. Those were some good days. I've seen Long at it highest point and I've seen it at it lowest."
Hale didn't speak too much about Long's lowest point. His recollection was centered around the caring atmosphere among the employee and their boss.
"If you worked at Long and you did what you supposed to do, the Longs looked after you," he said. "They didn't pay me a lot of money, but they gave me enough to buy a car to drive and put a roof over my family's head. It was like home for me for 21 years."
Tarboro Mayor Donald Morris didn't work at Long, but he said he probably new hundreds of people who did. He said at one point Long was the largest employer in town.
"In the 1960s and 70s, Long supplied farm equipment all over the United States," he said. "The Longs were pioneers in the farm equipment business. They became self-made millionaires right here in Tarboro."
Morris has bitter-sweet emotions about the demolition of the buildings.
"They are tearing them down to decrease the tax value on the land," Morris said. "I understand that. That will be a big tax loss for the town in next years' budget.
"On the other hand, I hate to see it go. It's been a part of Tarboro for many years."
Tarboro resident Linda Goines said she also hates to see it go.
"When I heard about them tearing down the building, I thought what a wasted opportunity, it was because that was one of our first big industrial spreads here in Edgecombe County," she said. "It made a huge impact in this county and the southeastern United States. I wish they would use them for an Industrial Museum."
Goines' idea of an Industrial Museum is not altogether lost, as two of the buildings will not be torn down.
Jeffrey Laskin, owner of Advanced Demolition and Recycling, expects the demolition of the three buildings to take two months to complete demolition of the three buildings within two months. In the coming days Hale, who works across the street from the old Long Manufacturing Co., will get a first hand glimpse at the demolition. Being there is like completing a full circle.
"I work over here at Doug Henry, the grounds where I filled out an application to work at Long when I was 21 years old," Hale said. "Now I'm 73 years old and I'm standing on these grounds again. Long was like home to me."
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Long gone
Long-time Long Manufacturing Co. employees reminisce
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Carlos Vivas takes a close look at a grave marker in the Community Cemetery in Princeville. Vivas along with several other volunteers meet Saturday in an effort to discuss methods of restoring the cemetery back to perpetual condition.
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Monumental task
PRINCEVILLE — The volunteers who met Saturday to discuss cleaning the cemeteries on N.C. Highway 111 agreed that the task at hand is monumental.
Headed by Princeville native Milton Bullock, approximately a dozen volunteers exchanged ideas on how to turn the cemeteries from the overgrown weeded trash strewn graveyard, into a perpetual garden.
"I was told that it is in the worst shape that it has ever been in," Bullock said. "In many places, grass has covered markers. We have our work cut out for us, but with the help of God and all the partners pulling together, we will turn this cemetery." - NECP school building set for July 15 completion
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Monumental task
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A landscaping project at the traffic circle on North Main Street is an effort to improve America in Bloom judges' impression of the Town of Tarboro on their visit to town next month.
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America in Bloom judges’ visit Tarboro next month
Tarboro’s America in Bloom (AIB) steering committee is gearing up for the AIB judges’ visit to town next month. AIB is a national non-profit organization that promotes “beautification through education and community involvement.”
“Please join us as Tarboro prepares for the visit of national AIB judges on June 17 and 18,” said AIB co-chair Connie Sherrill in a competition planning update. “Help us bring out the beauty of our exceptional town.” - Local Principal Completes Leadership Program
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America in Bloom judges’ visit Tarboro next month
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Former SouthWest Edgecombe football coach Raymond Cobb, left, and former baseball standout and coach, Bruce Rhodes, were inducted into the Cougars Hall of Fame Monday night.
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Cobb, Rhodes inducted in Cougars Hall of Fame
PINETOPS – The SouthWest Edgecombe Cougars athletic department inducted two legendary coaches into their Hall of Fame Monday night. Former football coach Raymond Cobb and former baseball coach Bruce Rhodes were the recipients of the awards.
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Cobb, Rhodes inducted in Cougars Hall of Fame
- Opinion
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My 13 years have been lucky
It was 13 years Sunday that a drought was broken in Big Spring, Texas, After that, we ate Mexican for dinner with a gathering of family and friends.
The next day, a Saturday, Stephanie and I joined one another in marriage under a beautiful little gazebo by Comanche Trail Lake, fed by the historic spring from which the community draws its name.
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My 13 years have been lucky
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Corbett/Chasse Wedding
Brittney Joyce Corbett and Kenneth Robert Chasse, Jr. were united in marriage on April 6th, 2013, at 5:30pm at the Imperial Centre in Rocky Mount. The Rev. Carrol Bradbury officiated the ceremony.
The Rehearsal Dinner was hosted by Shirley and Donald Foreman, Grandparents of the Groom and also Elisha and Kenneth Chasse, Parents of the Groom, at Pizza Inn in Rocky Mount.
The Bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Durwood Corbett of Macclesfield, NC. The Groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Robert Leonel Chasse, Sr. of Pinetops, NC.
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- Obituaries Archives
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JOSEPH ORION BOONE
ROCKY MOUNT — Joseph Orion Boone, 85, of Rocky Mount, died Sunday, May 19, 2013. Funeral arrangements are pending with H.D. Pope Funeral Home, Rocky Mount.
- ELIZABETH HATHAWAY BULLUCK
- SHIRLEY A. GOLDSTON
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JOSEPH ORION BOONE
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Great fondue
My husband and I love to entertain. We also love fondue. I have 4 or 5 fondue pots. I use them regularly. Some of them I have had for a long time.
Fondue began as a way to use up old, hardened cheese. The original fondue was cheese with wine. You then dipped hardened pieces of bread into the mixture. In America, the 1950's was the height of the fondue craze. However, it appears to be making a comeback. - Budget Friendly Deliciousness
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- Events
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Edgecombe Events May 22
Edgecombe Events should be submitted by noon the day before publication. Items eligible include notices of local meetings and activities of non-profit organizations, clubs, schools and civic groups in the community. Information should be brief and typewritten, neatly printed or via e-mail. Questions? 823-3106 or e-mail: events@dailysoutherner.com. Leave a daytime contact phone number.
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Edgecombe Events May 22
- Our Community
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Edgecombe Garden Club honors members
The Edgecombe Garden Club met May 1 for their noon luncheon at the Fountains of the Albemarle. After President Pauline Nicolosi greeted everyone, Sandra Joyner, Devotion Chairman, read “Torch” which was about our tongues torching good or evil.
Hostess Barbara Getzug described her specially designed flower arrangement of mock orange, snowball, purple columbine, and many varieties of roses. President Pauline, Hostesses Gloria Wall and Louise Fleming did the table arrangements. They contained wiegelia, azalea, ivy, mock orange, and ligustrum. - DAR AWARDS
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