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table of contents
| 1854 | North Carolina Railway comes to Durham’s station. |
| 1869 | Blackwell Durham Tobacco Company is incorporated. |
| 1870 | Julian Shakespeare Carr, son of wealthy Chapel Hill merchant, buys into Blackwell firm producing Bull Durham smoking tobacco. |
| 1874 | James B., Washington, and Benjamin Duke move into Durham to establish a factory. |
| 1881 | County of Durham is formed. The Dukes decide to begin cigarette making in Durham; Blackwell Durham follows. |
| 1884 | W. Duke & Sons begins using the Bonsack cigarette-making machine. James B. Duke goes to New York to seek capital, markets, expertise, and cheaper labor; he establishes a factory in New York City. Durham Cotton Manufacturing Company is founded in East Durham. |
| 1885 | The Dukes begin full-scale mechanized production of cigarettes in Durham and begin hiring local workers. |
| 1887 | Cigarmakers Progressive Union and the Knights of Labor become active in Durham. Blackwell Durham Company abandons cigarette production. |
| 1888 | The last skilled hand-cigarette maker is displaced from the Duke factory. |
| 1890s | Other textile mills are founded in Durham with profits from the tobacco industry. |
| 1890 | American Tobacco Company is founded by the merger of five leading cigarette companies; James B. Duke becomes president. |
| 1892 | Erwin Cotton Mills Company is founded. |
| 1894 | Golden Belt and Durham Hosiery Company are founded. |