Durden Recounts Rise of Duke Power
Friday, March 9, 2001
A new book by Duke University historian Robert F. Durden
recounts how James B. Duke foresaw the importance of electrical
power at the start of the 20
th
century and its potential
to transform not only the Southern economy but also the quality of
life.
Electrifying the Piedmont
Carolinas: The Duke Power Company
(1904-1997) is the story of
how the well-known industrialist developed the production of
electricity in the Carolinas and how, after his death, the company
eventually expanded far beyond its original boundaries. It is being
published by Carolina Academic Press in Durham, an independent
scholarly press, and is expected to be in bookstores in late
April.
"He was a very bright man," Durden said of Duke. "Essentially, his
plan was to build hydroelectric plants that could be used to run
textile mills, which he saw as the escape route from massive
agrarian poverty."
By the time of Duke's death in 1925, more than a dozen power plants
were completed. The primary founder of Duke University lived to see
what he envisioned - that the larger part of the textile industry
would in fact move from the North to the South, Durden said.
"While the bright economic picture of the Piedmont Carolinas at the
close of the 20
th
century resulted from a wide variety
of factors - an able and dependable workforce, a favorable business
climate, excellent transport facilities, and a relatively benign
natural climate - the reliable and comparatively cheap electricity
provided by the Duke Power Company also has clearly been an
important element in the region's economic advancement throughout
the century," Durden writes in the preface of his book.
Durden, a professor emeritus of history at Duke University, was
commissioned to write
Electrifying the Piedmont Carolinas
by the Duke Power Company in 1997. He was given complete access to
the company's archival material and unconditional freedom to
interpret its history. Durden's research included an oral history
conference with several retired executives and other longtime
employees.
The 217-page book begins with the establishment of the Southern
Power Company, forerunner of Duke Power Company, and the
construction of one hydroelectric plant on the Catawba River in
1904.
According to Durden, the power company originally was the
brainchild not of Duke, but of Dr. Gill Wylie, a native South
Carolinian who saw potential in the Catawba's undeveloped
water-power sites and who also had an idea for linking a series of
hydroelectric plants on the river.
Wylie recruited William States Lee, another South Carolinian and a
promising engineer, to design and link together several generating
plants with high-voltage transmission lines. Initially, there was
little progress because of a lack of money. Then the men convinced
Duke to join them in 1905.
Bolstered by Duke's financial resources, the three men worked
together to oversee what would become the first interconnected
system of power plants and the related development of an entire
river and its valley. Other such plants around the nation had been
built to serve either a single city or a major factory.
"This meant not only a more reliable type of electric service, but
also a more efficient and economical use of hydro power," Durden
notes in the preface.
Successive chapters recount the arduous labor and engineering feats
employed in constructing the Catawba system. Duke Power's engineers
had always designed the company's plants and dams, but in the 1920s
they began to construct them as well.
A decade later, as the company endured the Depression, it came to
rely increasingly on coal-fired steam plants, which eventually
overtook the hydro plants in importance, Durden notes. Because of
Duke Power's unique do-it-yourself construction policy, the
company's coal-fired plants long held the national record for fuel
efficiency.
Later chapters focus on the company's financial challenges during
the 1960s and '70s and how it contended with them, as well as the
strategies it used in preparing for deregulation and the heightened
competition that ensued.
The book ends with the merger of Duke Power and Pan Energy, a
Houston-based natural gas company, in 1997, marking the last days
of the company as it was known. From that point forward, Duke Power
became a subsidiary - albeit the largest one - of Duke Energy
Corporation.
Today, Duke Energy has 22,000 employees and a wide range of energy
and research facilities in more than 50 countries worldwide. The
company is second in gas marketing in the United States and third
in power marketing. Duke Energy also is one of the country's top 10
generators of electricity.
Durden has taught at Duke for more than 40 years. He is the author
of
The Dukes of Durham
, a history of the Duke family;
The Launching of Duke University
, which chronicled the
institution's early years; and
Lasting Legacy to the Carolinas:
The Duke Endowment
(1924-1994).
Written by Noah Bartolucci.
For more information, contact: Geoffrey Mock | (919) 681-4514 | geoffrey.mock@duke.edu
