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・ Piedmont Hills High School
・ Piedmont Hospital
・ Piedmont Hotel
・ Piedmont Institution
・ Piedmont International University
・ Piedmont Land Conservancy
・ Piedmont League
・ Piedmont Limited
・ Piedmont Middle School
・ Piedmont Middle School (disambiguation)
・ Piedmont Mill Historic District
・ Piedmont Mountains
・ Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge
・ Piedmont Natural Gas
・ Piedmont Newnan Hospital
Piedmont Number One
・ Piedmont Park
・ Piedmont Pines, Oakland, California
・ Piedmont Records
・ Piedmont Region Headquarters
・ Piedmont region of Virginia
・ Piedmont ringlet
・ Piedmont Sanatorium
・ Piedmont Technical College
・ Piedmont Television
・ Piedmont Triad
・ Piedmont Triad International Airport
・ Piedmont Unified School District
・ Piedmont Union order of battle
・ Piedmont University


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Piedmont Number One : ウィキペディア英語版
Piedmont Number One

Piedmont Number One is a former textile plant and former National Historic Landmark in Piedmont, Greenville County, South Carolina. It burned in 1983.
==Piedmont Manufacturing Company==

The Piedmont Manufacturing Company was established by Henry Pinckney Hammett in 1873. Over the next few years, it constructed a textile mill and village at Garrison Shoals on the Saluda River at the present location of Piedmont. Piedmont Number One, which opened in 1876, was a four-story brick factory with an L-shaped floor plan. Powered by a water wheel, it had 5,000 spindles and 112 looms. Piedmont Number One was enlarged in 1880 and again in 1900. In 1888, Piedmont Number Two, was built on the west bank of the Saluda River in Anderson County. In 1892, the mills operated 47,000 spindles and 1,300 looms.〔Edgar, Walter, ed. ''The South Carolina Encyclopedia'', University of South Carolina Press, 2006, p. 417, ISBN 1-57003-598-9〕
Because the mill was built where the water power was available, the Piedmont mill village was constructed for its employees. The village included houses for its employees, schools, churches, and other buildings. The village houses and stores were sold to private owners in the 1950s. By 1977, Piedmont Number One was no longer manufacturing textiles.〔
In recognition of its role in the Southern textile industry, Piedmont Number One was designated a National Historic Landmark on June 2, 1978. Because of significant modifications to its building, Piedmont Number Two was not also designated.
A fire in October 1983 destroyed much of Piedmont Number One. The ruins were demolished. Its National Historic Landmark and National Register of Historic Places designations were deleted on March 5, 1986.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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