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This article is from the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, 6 volumes, edited by William S. Powell. Copyright ©1979-1996 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. For personal use and not for further distribution. Please submit permission requests for other use directly to the publisher.

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Ragan, George Washington

by G. S. Selph, 1994

16 Sept. 1846–9 June 1936

An engraving of George Washington Ragan published in 1917. Image from the Internet Archive / N.C. Goverment & Heritage Library.George Washington Ragan, textile manufacturer, was born in Gaston County, the son of Daniel Franklin and Harriet Frances Glenn Ragan. Self-educated, he is said to have joined in May 1864 the Junior Reserves, which became Company C of the Seventy-first Regiment of Confederate Troops, and to have seen service in eastern North Carolina and Virginia. Returning to the family farm, he remained until his father's death in 1872, when he began operating a series of nearby community stores before moving to Gastonia as a merchant in 1880.

In 1885 Ragan entered into a mercantile partnership with George A. Gray in the community of Lowell but after a year he returned to Gastonia. In 1887 he joined a group of other men, including Gray, to organize the town's first cotton mill and in 1890 he joined a small group to establish a bank, of which he was president and director for two years. Resigning from the bank in 1893, he joined others in creating a second mill, the Trenton Cotton Mills; he became its treasurer and, in effect, the chief executive officer. The mill was a success, but Ragan sold his interest in 1899 to undertake the organization of an even larger mill. In 1900 the Arlington Cotton Mills were established to produce combed cotton yarn of the finest quality and capable of competing with yarn heretofore produced only in the North. Ragan also was involved with mills in Charlotte and engaged in the development of real estate in both Gastonia and Charlotte.

A Presbyterian, Ragan was a donor to Davidson College, to a college in Georgia, and to the Presbyterian Orphans Home at Barium Springs, N.C. He married, first, Amanda Zoe Reid in 1883, and they became the parents of three daughters, only one of whom survived infancy. Following the death of his wife in 1891, he married Bettie Gibson Caldwell, and they became the parents of two sons and four daughters.

References:

Samuel A. Ashe, ed., Biographical History of North Carolina, vol. 8 (1917).

Charlotte Observer, 12 June 1936.

Confederate Veteran 35 (February, August 1927).

Gaston Gazette, 15 Oct. 1980.

Gastonia Gazette, 4 Apr. 1965.

James R. Young, Textile Leaders of the South (1963).

Additional Resources:

Wehunt-Black, Rita. "George Washington Ragan (1846-1936)."  Gaston County, North Carolina: A Brief History. The History Press, 2008. 106-107.

Ragan, Robert Allison. 1995. The Ragans of Gastonia, 1790-1995: George Washington Ragan and Caldwell Ragan : builders of the new South and pioneers in southern textiles. Charlotte, NC (P.O. Box 6303, Charlotte 28207): R.A. Ragan & Co.

Image Credits:

E. G. Williams and Bro., engraver "G. W. Ragan." Engraving. Biographical history of North Carolina from colonial times to the present volume 8. Greensboro, N.C.: C.L. Van Noppen. 1917. 429. Internet Archive / N.C. Government & Heritage Library. https://archive.org/stream/biographicalhist08ashe#page/n559/mode/2up (accessed September 18, 2013).

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