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  • '''Cotton''' is one of the oldest known crops in the world, being found in archeologi humans from both the Old World and the New World. The cotton plant (''Gossypium sp.'') is in the mallow family, being closely
    5 KB (923 words) - 19:48, 14 February 2010
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 16:10, 13 April 2008
  • 87 bytes (11 words) - 05:45, 20 January 2009
  • ...y because their industrial economy depended on textiles, which depended on cotton. It proved a failure. ==Cotton supply and demand==
    5 KB (779 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • '''Sydney Cotton''' (1894-1969) was an [[Australia]]n-born aviation pioneer and adventurer. ...he machine should always be faster that the fastest fighters in use" wrote Cotton.<ref>{{citation
    3 KB (519 words) - 10:29, 8 April 2024
  • 120 bytes (17 words) - 23:34, 7 July 2008
  • 148 bytes (19 words) - 21:16, 23 July 2009
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Cotton]]. Needs checking by a human.
    940 bytes (124 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • 198 bytes (20 words) - 09:55, 11 February 2011
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 03:46, 4 November 2007
  • * Lebergott, Stanley. "Through the Blockade: The Profitability and Extent of Cotton Smuggling, 1861-1865," ''The Journal of Economic History,'' Vol. 41, No. 4 * Owsley, Frank Lawrence. ''King Cotton Diplomacy: Foreign relations of the Confederate States of America'' (1931,
    1 KB (199 words) - 17:10, 24 March 2008
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/King Cotton]]. Needs checking by a human.
    526 bytes (72 words) - 12:52, 7 March 2023
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 12:10, 26 September 2007

Page text matches

  • Plants grown for the production of fibres, such as cotton.
    94 bytes (13 words) - 13:18, 13 December 2008
  • ===Economics of tobacco and cotton===
    349 bytes (43 words) - 09:39, 2 August 2023
  • * Lebergott, Stanley. "Through the Blockade: The Profitability and Extent of Cotton Smuggling, 1861-1865," ''The Journal of Economic History,'' Vol. 41, No. 4 * Owsley, Frank Lawrence. ''King Cotton Diplomacy: Foreign relations of the Confederate States of America'' (1931,
    1 KB (199 words) - 17:10, 24 March 2008
  • ...an nation with significant gold reserves and an economy based primarily on cotton; formerly a French colony (population about 18 million).
    194 bytes (25 words) - 14:05, 19 July 2013
  • ...y because their industrial economy depended on textiles, which depended on cotton. It proved a failure. ==Cotton supply and demand==
    5 KB (779 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • Raincoat made of waterproof heavy-duty cotton drill or poplin, wool gabardine, or in some cases leather, and is usually k
    179 bytes (25 words) - 04:17, 11 September 2009
  • ...socialist, who established several utopian communities; at his New Lanark cotton mill in Scotland, experimented with social and industrial welfare programs.
    234 bytes (29 words) - 13:39, 6 April 2018
  • '''Cotton''' is one of the oldest known crops in the world, being found in archeologi humans from both the Old World and the New World. The cotton plant (''Gossypium sp.'') is in the mallow family, being closely
    5 KB (923 words) - 19:48, 14 February 2010
  • ...hich David took advantage of. He said that the somewhat boring work in the cotton mill gave him the skill of endurance and persistence. At the age of 26 he d
    2 KB (297 words) - 15:01, 23 March 2012
  • ...o the industrial revolution in Britain, which featured the organization of cotton and wool yarn and cloth factories, and the subsequent spread of the industr
    304 bytes (47 words) - 08:37, 29 June 2008
  • '''Sydney Cotton''' (1894-1969) was an [[Australia]]n-born aviation pioneer and adventurer. ...he machine should always be faster that the fastest fighters in use" wrote Cotton.<ref>{{citation
    3 KB (519 words) - 10:29, 8 April 2024
  • {{r|Cotton}}
    451 bytes (59 words) - 19:15, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Cotton}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/King Cotton]]. Needs checking by a human.
    526 bytes (72 words) - 12:52, 7 March 2023
  • * [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/15327 A Library Primer], by John Cotton Dana, 1903, setting out the basics of organising and running a library
    1 KB (150 words) - 21:51, 22 November 2010
  • {{r|Cotton}}
    682 bytes (90 words) - 10:06, 6 August 2023
  • ...of the Cape of Good Hope, and which was dissolved in 1874. It traded in cotton, silk, indigo dye, salt, saltpetre, tea and opium, mainly in India, and it
    597 bytes (91 words) - 05:05, 16 May 2012
  • {{r|F. Albert Cotton}}
    635 bytes (84 words) - 03:46, 1 November 2010
  • {{rpl|Cotton}} {{rpl|King Cotton}}
    2 KB (251 words) - 10:54, 9 September 2023
  • ...ent in 1960 and is today driven by an [[economy]] based primarily around [[cotton]] and its significant [[gold]] reserves. Its capital is [[Ouagadougou]]. [[
    772 bytes (105 words) - 14:14, 19 July 2013
  • {{r|F. Albert Cotton}}
    848 bytes (105 words) - 13:43, 11 May 2010
  • {{r|Cotton Candy Land}}
    723 bytes (121 words) - 10:37, 6 March 2014
  • {{r|Cotton}}
    936 bytes (120 words) - 19:37, 11 January 2010
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Cotton]]. Needs checking by a human.
    940 bytes (124 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • {{r|Cotton}}
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  • ...s to combine power, machinery, semi-skilled labor, and a new raw material (cotton) to create, more than a century before [[Henry Ford|Ford]], mass production ...reparatory and spinning processes, and he began to establish water-powered cotton mills even as far away as Scotland. His success encouraged many others to c
    5 KB (754 words) - 10:17, 14 November 2007
  • {{r|Cotton swab}}
    861 bytes (132 words) - 06:39, 2 October 2008
  • ...solid]], [[striped]], [[polka-dot]], or "athletic", which are usually 100% cotton white-colored socks meant to be worn during [[exercise]] or [[sports]].
    3 KB (429 words) - 13:51, 24 May 2009
  • As one of the top cotton-producing states in the U.S., Mississippi also has the dubious distinction
    994 bytes (152 words) - 13:54, 9 September 2023
  • ...is cautious about economic development, wanting to build on petroleum and cotton reserves. Foreign investment has been limited.
    899 bytes (138 words) - 18:41, 3 March 2024
  • ...(F) Sqn RIC was added in April 2003. 1 PRU's lineage goes back to [[Sydney Cotton]], before the Second World War.
    889 bytes (130 words) - 10:29, 8 April 2024
  • {{r|Sydney Cotton}}
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  • ...ajor financial center in Texas and served a a major port for the export of cotton and the import of many goods. Historically, Galveston was home to pirates
    985 bytes (148 words) - 17:31, 1 June 2008
  • {{r|Sydney Cotton}}
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  • #'Cotton Candy Land' (Ruth Bachelor, Bob Roberts) - 1:33
    1 KB (180 words) - 10:15, 6 March 2014
  • *{{cite paper | author=Berners-Lee, Tim; Bray, Tim; Connolly, Dan; Cotton, Paul; Fielding, Roy; Jeckle, Mario; Lilley, Chris; Mendelsohn, Noah; Orcha
    2 KB (311 words) - 03:12, 2 December 2009
  • * Farnie, Douglas Antony, and Mike Williams. ''Cotton Mills in Greater Manchester'' (1992) 212 pages ...uglas Antony, and David J. Jeremy. ''The Fibre That Changed the World: The Cotton Industry in International Perspective, 1600-1990s'' 2004
    9 KB (1,287 words) - 22:39, 27 June 2008
  • ..., it is usually made from [[gabardine]] fabric of [[wool]] or heavy duty [[cotton]], but in modern times [[leather]] trench coats have become popular as well
    2 KB (272 words) - 01:28, 21 February 2010
  • {{r|King Cotton}}
    2 KB (223 words) - 01:46, 31 July 2023
  • * the [[undershirt]] is usually a white, cotton t-shirt of a slightly thinner variant that is worn underneath a regular shi
    2 KB (359 words) - 23:19, 17 October 2007
  • ...ific picture of a beaten South, "when the northern soldier would tread her cotton fields, when the slave should be made free and the proud Southerner stricke ...d fever. He managed to maintain his wealth during the Civil War by selling cotton to U.S. Treasury agents. After the war, he was estimated to be among the fi
    6 KB (948 words) - 10:48, 19 June 2023
  • ...cially the ante-bellum and Civil War eras. His most important book, ''King Cotton Diplomacy'' (1931), remains the major study of Confederate diplomacy. ...the position of the South vis-à-vis the North was created not by slavery, cotton, or states' rights, but by the two regions' misunderstanding of each other.
    8 KB (1,124 words) - 09:25, 27 June 2008
  • ...or tent fabrics. In some areas, tribal weavers also use cotton. Although [[cotton]] is actually more stable than wool, it is less durable and often more expe ...using a weighted object called a spindle. When a twist of the raw wool or cotton is attached to the spindle and the spindle is spun and dropped, it pulls th
    7 KB (1,167 words) - 03:38, 14 October 2009
  • Modern belts can be made from [[leather]], [[nylon]], [[cotton]], [[chain]], or other decorative material. Most belts are made from a mat
    2 KB (370 words) - 14:21, 27 January 2008
  • ...d commercial center in the region. Uzbekistan is the world's third-largest cotton producer, although its intensive farming has caused great ecological damage
    2 KB (317 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • | quote = In 1924, a fire in the hold of a steamship carrying cotton prompted the Houston Fire Commissioner to declare that the Port of Houston
    3 KB (358 words) - 05:23, 5 March 2024
  • Arthur Hugh Clough, the son of James Clough, a cotton merchant, and Anne Perfect, was born in Rodney Street, [[Liverpool]] on Jan
    2 KB (350 words) - 13:14, 16 February 2017
  • {{r|King Cotton}}
    2 KB (266 words) - 14:24, 15 March 2024
  • ...cotton thread and textiles. This policy failed because of resistance from cotton textile industrialists, who relocated textile facilities and capital to Hon
    10 KB (1,534 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...oleskin]], originally the skin of a mole, but later a heavy, soft, durable cotton fabric, or clothing made from this
    3 KB (383 words) - 07:12, 17 February 2008
  • * Aiken, Charles S. ''The Cotton Plantation South Since the Civil War'' Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 * Phillips, Ulrich B. "The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt," ''Political Science Quarterly'' 20#2 (Jun., 1905), pp. 257-275 [http
    10 KB (1,394 words) - 01:34, 26 February 2008
  • ...rge irrigation systems were developed and the region became specialized in cotton growing. Both of these landlocked countries are losing arable land to soil
    2 KB (384 words) - 03:21, 4 March 2024
  • ...Lower South to East Texas where the climate and soil allowed for intensive cotton cultivation. Most of these plantations produced for an export market. Thi ...mmer, and their smaller size and hooves were well suited for such crops as cotton, tobacco, and sugar. The character of soils and climate in the lower South
    10 KB (1,498 words) - 17:45, 11 July 2013
  • {{rpl|King Cotton}}
    2 KB (308 words) - 02:06, 31 July 2023
  • ...ood for a settlement of the slavery issue at any price for the sake of the cotton trade. The terms "Woolly Heads" and "Amalgamationistss" were also given to * Brauer, Kinley J. ''Cotton versus Conscience: Massachusetts Whig Politics and Southwestern Expansion,
    8 KB (1,263 words) - 16:50, 22 March 2023
  • ...avily polluted and is drying up, mostly as a result of badly implemented [[cotton]] [[irrigation]] schemes.
    3 KB (373 words) - 03:51, 8 April 2009
  • ...cloth in every country, to the industrial revolution in Britain, driven by cotton and wool yarn and cloth factories, which then spread to Europe, America, Ja ...rments and bedding. Demand for Indian cotton textiles, especially the 100% cotton fabric known as calico, increased in the 16th century. European textile mak
    24 KB (3,500 words) - 07:39, 31 August 2008
  • ...sidered in terms of large plantations with more than 20 slaves that grew [[cotton]] and other crops for export, and the "plain folk", who owned few or no sla ...Historians define a plantation as having 20 or more slaves (of all ages). Cotton was the main crop in a broad swath (called the "Black Belt") that included
    12 KB (1,770 words) - 23:41, 20 December 2008
  • Sueded silk, sueded cotton and similar sueded fabrics are brushed, sanded or chemically treated for ex
    3 KB (457 words) - 04:05, 17 September 2009
  • * Daniels, G. W. "American Cotton Trade with Liverpool under the Embargo and Non-intercourse Acts." ''America
    3 KB (429 words) - 22:32, 14 September 2013
  • ...responsibilities of this subcommittee are program and markets related to [[cotton]] and cottonseed, [[wheat]], feed grains, [[soy]]beans, oilseeds, [[rice]],
    3 KB (366 words) - 14:40, 5 August 2023
  • [[Image:Cotton field 7904.JPG|thumb|South Carolina cotton field ready for harvest|300 px]] ...wn upstate, but the thinner soils eroded and played out; today most of the cotton is grown in the upper coastal plain.
    14 KB (2,251 words) - 09:01, 9 August 2023
  • ...&printsec=titlepage&dq=%22%27%27A+History+of+Transportation+in+the+Eastern+Cotton+Belt online edition] * "The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt," ''Political Science Quarterly'' 20#2 (Jun., 1905), pp. 257-275 [http
    8 KB (1,140 words) - 04:51, 22 March 2010
  • ::Congress passes the '''Cotton Control Act'''.
    4 KB (453 words) - 00:34, 21 June 2009
  • | quote = In 1924, a fire in the hold of a steamship carrying cotton prompted the Houston Fire Commissioner to declare that the Port of Houston
    4 KB (515 words) - 05:23, 5 March 2024
  • ...dogi, usually just called gi. The modern gi is a quilted cotton jacket and cotton drawstring pants, fastened by an [[obi]], or belt. The obi is usually color
    8 KB (1,254 words) - 08:31, 30 September 2019
  • He next combined nitroglycerin with another high explosive, [[gun-cotton]], and obtained a transparent, jelly-like substance, which was a still more ...less gunpowder]]s, containing in its latest forms about equal parts of gun-cotton and nitroglycerin. This powder was a precursor of [[cordite]], and Nobel's
    7 KB (1,127 words) - 09:02, 4 May 2024
  • ...er.com/files/2007/08/green-basics-organic-cotton.php Green Basics: Organic Cotton,] 2007-08-23.</ref> According to the study the water and energy used in wa
    10 KB (1,582 words) - 00:28, 26 October 2013
  • * Lebergott, Stanley. "Through the Blockade: the Profitability and Extent of Cotton Smuggling, 1861-1865." ''Journal of Economic History'' 1981 41(4): 867-888.
    3 KB (411 words) - 15:51, 24 March 2008
  • ...Four Seasons in the Mississippi Delta'' (2007) [http://www.amazon.com/High-Cotton-Seasons-Mississippi-Delta/dp/1582433534/ref=sr_1_2/103-4827826-5463040?ie=U ...in the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta'' (1990). [http://www.amazon.com/Steamboats-Cotton-Economy-River-Yazoo-Mississippi/dp/1578066220/ref=sr_1_1/103-4827826-546304
    10 KB (1,316 words) - 10:31, 19 June 2023
  • ...th started early to build railways, it concentrated on short lines linking cotton regions to oceanic or river ports. Its lack of a real network was a major h
    3 KB (494 words) - 10:16, 5 March 2024
  • | quote = In 1924, a fire in the hold of a steamship carrying cotton prompted the Houston Fire Commissioner to declare that the Port of Houston
    5 KB (645 words) - 12:04, 14 July 2022
  • ...eir use quickly became widespread in crop production. With crops such as [[cotton]], [[tobacco]] and many fruits, it became standard practice to spray on a r
    4 KB (593 words) - 07:55, 12 February 2009
  • ...some time during the year 2000 for release in 2001. They were printed on a cotton fibre paper by [[Chan Wanich Security Printing Company Limited]], [[Thailan Cotton fibre paper. The date "2001" in 3 corners. The notes have an [[albatross]]
    9 KB (1,497 words) - 05:57, 9 June 2009
  • ...f 1824]], favored New England and Middle State manufacturers of woolen and cotton textiles and of metal goods. With [[Henry Clay]]'s backing, Kentucky got p
    4 KB (594 words) - 16:50, 22 March 2023
  • ...The South imported very little machinery from Europe; it mostly imported cotton and woolen cloth. Politically the southerners had their way with tariffs;
    8 KB (1,266 words) - 16:50, 22 March 2023
  • ...o engines, each of 110 horse-power. The other engines were used in the 107 cotton mills, many of which contained several. The average engine had a 26 horse-p ...bed cotton with wire brushes and spun it by hand; the father then wove the cotton on a hand loom. Output was expensive and consumed locally. Most of Britain'
    20 KB (3,016 words) - 10:16, 5 March 2024
  • ...|id=ISBN 0-471-50532-3}} First published in 1976 with Professor F. Albert Cotton of [[Texas A and M University]] as the main author.</ref> ...nd explained below were drawn from many of the available sources:<ref name=Cotton/><ref name=Cox>{{cite book|author=P.A. Cox|title=Inorganic Chemistry|editio
    13 KB (1,921 words) - 09:37, 6 March 2024
  • ...o engines, each of 110 horse-power. The other engines were used in the 107 cotton mills, many of which contained several. The average engine had a 26 horse-p ...[[cotton]] with wire brushes and spun it by hand; the father then wove the cotton on a hand [[loom]]. Output was expensive and consumed locally. Most of Brit
    20 KB (3,013 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...ooks.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=y2yF9ngbPF0C&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=arkwright+cotton&ots=ReuNE4QY3A&sig=Ipw2LusetesJVGNZ17DGaan5oeQ#PPP3,M1 online edition] ...Isaac. ''American Management and British Labor: A Comparative Study of the Cotton Spinning Industry'' (1990) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=15109128 on
    17 KB (2,454 words) - 08:14, 11 October 2013
  • ...er for shipping local regional products to northern and eastern factories. Cotton became the region's principal cash crop, and Elm Street in Dallas was its m ...s in the increasingly white-collar city, which was now the world's leading cotton center. Businessmen took control of civic affairs; with little municipal pa
    10 KB (1,532 words) - 00:18, 31 July 2023
  • ...gotiation. 2. Fighting on the sea or privateering. S. Fighting on land. 4. Cotton. Two of these instrumentalities have failed." Such is the "Quadrilateral" o
    5 KB (676 words) - 14:12, 2 February 2023
  • ...hot topic." In one study, conspicuous marks were applied to the heads of [[cotton-top tamarin]]s<ref name=Hauser1/>. Some of the monkeys reportedly met the c <blockquote>"Overall, results suggest that cotton-top tamarins fail to exhibit any evidence of mirror-guided behavior….Take
    13 KB (2,003 words) - 23:28, 9 July 2011
  • ...tably the production of carriages. Kinston also became a major tobacco and cotton trading center. By the start of the twentieth century, more than five milli ...entury saw a variety of industries come to Kinston including lumber mills, cotton mills, and even professional sports in the form of a minor league [[basebal
    9 KB (1,325 words) - 13:17, 2 February 2023
  • # ''kachera'', a cotton undergarment; and
    5 KB (724 words) - 11:15, 6 April 2024
  • Industrialisation began in the 1860s, with the building of the first [[cotton]] textile factory in Kagoshima in 1867.
    5 KB (675 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...s expand to include larger items, such as chipmunks ([[Tamias striatus]]), cotton rats ([[Sigmodon hispidus]]), squirrels ([[Sciurus]]spp.), and rabbits ([[S
    5 KB (686 words) - 14:20, 8 March 2024
  • | quote = In 1924, a fire in the hold of a steamship carrying cotton prompted the Houston Fire Commissioner to declare that the Port of Houston
    6 KB (779 words) - 22:23, 14 July 2022
  • ...s of America]] designed to prevent the local and international movement of cotton, supplies, soldiers and arms into or out of the Confederacy. The vast majo ...unners carried only a small fraction of the usual cargo. Thus, Confederate cotton exports were reduced 95% from 10 million bales in the three years prior to
    28 KB (4,319 words) - 03:04, 18 October 2013
  • ...f Memphis, showing the city's cotton industry|Memphis became known as the "Cotton Capital of the World" in the years following the Civil War]] ...rialized cities in the South.<ref name=jsh/> Memphis became known as the "Cotton Capital of the World" during the late 19th century, and Nashville, Knoxvill
    14 KB (1,930 words) - 14:40, 19 August 2023
  • ...ioning the patient, or using instruments as simple as a [[reflex hammer]], cotton-tipped wooden swab, and small vials of ammonia and ground coffee.
    6 KB (751 words) - 13:35, 12 June 2010
  • ...ized brushes, foam-tipped tools, and spatula-like metal tools. An ordinary cotton swab can be useful, as can be a soft wood or plastic burnisher.
    6 KB (960 words) - 18:26, 1 June 2021
  • ...was great because of the falling prices for export crops such as wheat and cotton. [[Coxey's Army]] was a highly publicized march of unemployed men from Ohio
    5 KB (708 words) - 01:41, 10 March 2024
  • ...roduced a number of national leaders. [[World War II]] brought prosperity. Cotton faded in importance as the state developed a manufacturing and service base The state became a prosperous center of slave plantations growing cotton in the Black Belt, with subsistence farmers (with few slaves) eking out a l
    23 KB (3,627 words) - 14:22, 15 March 2024
  • ...th and 19th centuries for the production of thread and cloth, especially [[cotton]] with the distinctive [[Paisley Pattern]]. ...iddle of Gordon Street at the junction with Bridge Street and Loanend, and Cotton Street. It is of the [[Art Nouveau]] in style. Designed by local architect
    17 KB (2,739 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...hbrush, this may help. Otherwise, cotton balls, makeup sponges, or quilted cotton makeup pads, wetted with 3% hydrogen peroxide, can help. Dab, don't rub, an
    11 KB (1,557 words) - 00:26, 9 September 2010
  • ...ROP EXPECTED Opposition of North Carolina's Executive Settles the Matter --Cotton Also Discussed. Tobacco Position Settled. Expect Smaller Crop.
    8 KB (1,070 words) - 08:48, 5 October 2022
  • ...ley, Neil. ''The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture'' (1997). [http://www.amazon.com/White-Scourge-Mexicans-American-Cr * Sharpless, Rebecca. ''Fertile Ground, Narrow Choices: Women on Texas Cotton Farms, 1900-1940.'' (1999). 319 pp. [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=
    20 KB (2,775 words) - 22:47, 20 September 2013
  • ...the Currimbhoy Ebrahims) who owned half the spindles and looms of Bombay's cotton mills<ref name = "system" />.
    13 KB (1,939 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...h originally the word tartan referred to the type of cloth (like linen, or cotton) and not the pattern of colors as the word almost exclusively signifies tod
    6 KB (1,037 words) - 10:49, 11 June 2009
  • ...rigin, History, Technology, and Production'' (1999) [http://www.amazon.com/Cotton-History-Technology-Production-Science/dp/0471180459/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=bo
    6 KB (811 words) - 09:07, 17 August 2013
  • ...he farm; he may have poisoned many of the pollinators by spraying blooming cotton; he may have logged off the woods, removing hollow trees that provided home
    6 KB (890 words) - 10:05, 6 August 2023
  • ...eteran of The [[American Revolutionary War]]. and the founder of the first cotton mill in the city. Fall River is currently the eighth largest city in Massa ...structures at the foot of the Quequechan River, was built and Fall River's cotton spinning era had begun in earnest. After a decade of building, Fall River a
    21 KB (3,471 words) - 20:44, 25 March 2024
  • ...e South worked on farms and plantations growing indigo, rice, and tobacco; cotton became a major crop after 1790s. Slaves were expensive and were used by ric ...m South Carolina due west to texas. The result was explosive growth in the cotton industry and a proportionate increase in the demand for slave labor in the
    22 KB (3,384 words) - 13:58, 9 February 2024
  • * Hill-Aiello, Thomas A. "Dallas, Cotton and the Transatlantic Economy, 1885-1956." PhD dissertation U. of Texas, A
    6 KB (762 words) - 10:27, 28 January 2023
  • ...dy]]), but, when cooled rapidly, the result can be in the form of syrupy [[cotton candy]] (candyfloss). Vitrification can also occur when starting with a liq
    6 KB (901 words) - 08:28, 21 September 2013
  • ...dosed repeatedly when pesticide applicators apply insecticides on blooming cotton fields while the bees are foraging.
    14 KB (2,035 words) - 11:46, 2 February 2023
  • ...//www.dinsdoc.com/phillips-4.htm "The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt"] ''Political Science Quarterly'' 20 (June 1905): 257-75. * Reidy, Joseph P. ''From Slavery to Agrarian Capitalism in the Cotton Plantation South, Central Georgia, 1800-1880'' University of North Carolina
    14 KB (1,917 words) - 19:48, 1 May 2008
  • Patients may report their mouth feels like dry [[cotton]] or may feel chalky. There could be problems with [[swallowing]], speaking
    7 KB (1,117 words) - 09:03, 27 September 2012
  • ...elves near the projector, shoppers can buy movie theatre treats, including cotton candy and jumbo peanuts in the shell. {{'}}It’s part of the ambiance. We
    9 KB (1,195 words) - 11:20, 30 March 2023
  • :* ''[[Ashbya gossypii]]'', cotton pathogen, subject of genetics studies (polarity, cell cycle) :*''Sigmodon hispidus'' - [[Cotton rat]] formerly used in polio research
    15 KB (2,115 words) - 06:56, 9 June 2009
  • ...thanol]], [[butanol]], other [[alcohol]]s and [[plastic]]s), [[fiber]]s ([[cotton]], [[wool]], [[hemp]], and [[flax]]), the modern fiber building block [[pro ...cots, cotton, artichokes, aubergines (eggplant), saffron, lemons, oranges, cotton, almonds, figs and sub-tropical crops such as bananas and sugar cane.
    18 KB (2,643 words) - 20:48, 17 April 2014
  • ...istian sensibilities, the rising importance of slave labor in the Southern cotton economy, the Nat Turner uprising, and the rise of abolitionism, Southern de *[[James Hammond]] exclaims, "Cotton is King!", meaning Europe will intervene to protect source of vital raw mat
    14 KB (2,092 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • * Phillips, Ulrich B. "The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt." ''Political Science Quarterly'' 20, no. 2 (June 1905): 257-275.
    9 KB (1,238 words) - 17:34, 11 July 2013
  • ...er." The business position was summarized by George A. Sloan, head of the Cotton Textile Code Authority: {{Cquote|"Maximum hours and minimum wage provisions
    7 KB (1,135 words) - 23:06, 11 October 2013
  • ...millions dollars for factories that would produce paper, sailcloth, linen, cotton cloth, shoes, thread, stockings, pottery, ribbons, carpets, brass and iron ...mers for $8,320 at the Great Falls of the Passaic River, and built a small cotton factory. In 1794 dissatisfaction among the workers led to the closing of th
    13 KB (2,029 words) - 22:31, 27 May 2011
  • ** [[Silk-cotton tree]], ''Bombax'' species
    9 KB (782 words) - 13:20, 22 September 2020
  • ...Region huge state investments, as well as the development of large oil and cotton industries, have led to economic growth and a standard of living that ranks
    7 KB (1,106 words) - 16:49, 1 April 2024
  • ...ks of the Obion River; this is the side of the county that had most of the cotton and tobacco farms in the past, due to the more rugged terrain on the easter The 19th-century economy of the area was farming, with cotton and tobacco dominant on larger farms. The 20th-century economy was marked b
    32 KB (5,206 words) - 13:02, 27 November 2023
  • ...cause of [[pollinator decline]]. This can involve using a small brush or [[cotton]] swab to move pollen, or to simply tap or shake [[tomato]] blossoms to rel
    8 KB (1,161 words) - 16:21, 26 April 2008
  • * Reidy, Joseph P. ''From Slavery to Agrarian Capitalism in the Cotton Plantation South, Central Georgia, 1800-1880'' (1992).
    8 KB (1,058 words) - 10:30, 19 October 2010
  • ...ts, such as almonds. Rice is an important crop in northern California, and cotton remains an important crop in the inland valley. Dairy farming is a major in
    7 KB (1,118 words) - 10:31, 8 September 2023
  • [[Friedrich Engels]], whose father was a partner in a cotton firm in the English city of Manchester. Engels supplied Marx with a practic
    8 KB (1,189 words) - 07:41, 30 March 2012
  • ...wed by outbreaks in [[Sudan]] later the same year, and in 1979 - both in a cotton factory. The slight difference between the viruses in each country was only ...and [[Marburg]]), because both the bat-filled Kitum Cave and the Sudanese cotton factory - the roof of which provides a home for thousands of bats - were si
    16 KB (2,467 words) - 09:03, 9 August 2023
  • ...1890-96. Based on a coalition of [[wheat]] farmers in the Plains states, [[cotton]] tenant farmers in the deep South, [[silver]] miners in the West, and [[co ...s' Alliance]], a farmers' political organization that spread widely in the cotton and wheat belt, became the basis of the Populist party.
    21 KB (2,986 words) - 12:42, 11 July 2023
  • ..."'Economic Democracy' and the Concentration of Agricultural Wealth in the Cotton South, 1850-1860," ''Agricultural History'', 44 (January 1970), 63-93 [http
    8 KB (1,187 words) - 01:59, 21 April 2008
  • To the seven cotton states, Lincoln's election signaled a declaration of permanent Yankee hosti ...tates as a violation of state's rights. These border states did not have a cotton base and had refused to join the Confederacy, but now they did so.
    25 KB (3,863 words) - 09:01, 9 August 2023
  • *Cotton-top Tamarin ''[[Saguinus oedipus ]]''
    10 KB (1,357 words) - 20:34, 11 November 2007
  • ...as in the following description by Durr of what was said by U.S. Senator "Cotton Ed" Smith of South Carolina during a fight over the poll tax:
    9 KB (1,380 words) - 08:47, 2 December 2023
  • ...tem and searched if a police report had been made about the cameras in the Cotton On fitting room. He found the police report and it was assigned to investig
    18 KB (2,623 words) - 11:18, 27 October 2023
  • ...per capita basis, real income has stagnated at 1980 levels. Crops include cotton, sugarcane, soybeans, corn, wheat, tobacco, cassava (tapioca), fruits, vege
    8 KB (1,172 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...erate states hoped that Britain and France would intervene to rescue their cotton supply, but this hope remained unfulfilled. No European powers officially ...o take slaves where they wanted (the main cause of the secession the seven cotton states in winter 1860-61), or second, the right of states to be free of fed
    42 KB (6,216 words) - 12:53, 9 August 2023
  • ...the [[Helicoverpa zea|cotton bollworm]], a common cotton pest, feeds on Bt cotton it will ingest the toxin and die. [[Herbicides]] usually work by binding to
    23 KB (3,331 words) - 21:51, 3 March 2010
  • ...of the 19th century, Texas increased its production and became the leading cotton-growing state in the Union. The cattle industry also made great strides. Ra ...close of the frontier around 1890, Texas had more in common with southern cotton farmers than western ranchers and cattlemen.
    43 KB (6,654 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • ...he most popular fiber for knitting, many other materials are also used. [[Cotton]], [[linen]], [[silk]], and many other [[synthetic]] and natural fibers are
    10 KB (1,732 words) - 03:41, 14 February 2010
  • ...is well suited for cultivating cotton, and hence is often called '''black cotton soil'''. ...[[pulse (legume)|pulses]]. [[Cash crop]]s include [[peanut|groundnut]], [[cotton]], [[sugarcane]], [[turmeric]], and [[tobacco]]. The net irrigated area tot
    23 KB (3,318 words) - 06:29, 16 March 2024
  • ...address, given at the [[Cotton States and International Exposition (1895)|Cotton States and International Exposition]] in [[Atlanta, Georgia]], was widely w
    18 KB (2,770 words) - 09:33, 16 August 2023
  • ...society in Charleston. They had nine children and lived at "Fort Hill", a cotton plantation he built,and operated by a white overseer and dozens of slaves. ...//www.jstor.org/pss/1848824 in Jstor] emphasizes protection of the growing cotton industry.</ref> Clay made Calhoun the acting chairman of the powerful commi
    28 KB (4,390 words) - 09:42, 31 July 2023
  • ...ralization, Biotechnology and the Private Seed Sector: The Case of India’s Cotton Seed Market Discussion Paper 06-05, Indian Statistical Institute, Delhi</re
    25 KB (3,655 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...lourished until the American Civil War in 1861 cut off the supplies of raw cotton; the industry never recovered. However, by that time Scotland had developed
    17 KB (2,660 words) - 08:44, 28 June 2020
  • ...e of the original states of the United States. A rich slave state based on cotton, it was inspired by the brilliant states' rights theorist [[John C. Calhoun ...d the British out in 1781. The cotton gin made the state a major center of cotton plantations, enabling a rich elite centered in Charleston.
    52 KB (7,914 words) - 03:40, 6 February 2010
  • ...ide the standard. This type of coat is often referred to as "couton", or "cotton", in French.
    9 KB (1,591 words) - 04:54, 16 December 2007
  • ...The teacher then blesses the student and presents the student with a holy cotton laurel. Through the blessings both Ramayana and Narayana are shown respect.
    10 KB (1,725 words) - 09:35, 1 October 2019
  • ...e Puritans [[William Bradford]], [[Anne Bradstreet]], ''Edward Taylor'', [[Cotton Mather]], and the Puritan adventurer [[John Smith]]. Captain John Smith may
    9 KB (1,383 words) - 15:19, 20 March 2023
  • ...ley, Neil. ''The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture'' University of California Press, 1997.
    11 KB (1,536 words) - 23:05, 30 July 2023
  • ...e developed further. Muslims also brought to that country lemons, oranges, cotton, almonds, figs and sub-tropical crops such as bananas and sugar cane were g
    18 KB (2,822 words) - 11:00, 31 July 2015
  • ...mpossible to enforce, and food shortages occurred. Planters realized their cotton stocks were worthless, unless they sold them to Union Treasury agents, who ...to her port side to protect the hull from enemy fire. Sailors stacked hay, cotton bales, or sandbags around machinery and magazines. On April 16, under cover
    20 KB (3,047 words) - 14:08, 10 February 2023
  • ...ecially [[natural gas]], which it exports to [[Jordan]] and [[Israel]]. [[Cotton]] exports and tourism are important. Egypt is still a [[developing country]
    10 KB (1,506 words) - 16:41, 24 March 2024
  • ...ating engineers. Samuel Slater (1768-1835) of Rhode Island pulled American cotton-spinning technology by constructing carding, drawing, and roving machinery, ...]]'s invention in 1793 of the [[cotton gin]], a machine that separated raw cotton from seeds and other waste. Large plantations were the most efficient opera
    41 KB (6,136 words) - 10:39, 5 March 2024
  • ...Patricia Artiach, Cheryl Bowman, Stacey Garland, Claire Fujii, Matthew D. Cotton, Kurt Horst, Kevin Roberts, Bonnie Hatch, Hamilton O. Smith, J. Craig Vente ...Patricia Artiach, Cheryl Bowman, Stacey Garland, Claire Fujii, Matthew D. Cotton, Kurt Horst, Kevin Roberts, Bonnie Hatch, Hamilton O. Smith, J. Craig Vente
    20 KB (2,900 words) - 03:34, 16 February 2010
  • ...participating in a slave-based economy, and not grow, buy or sell tobacco, cotton and sugar, nor sell to plantations. The merchants of the South simply could
    10 KB (1,487 words) - 09:37, 6 August 2023
  • Boston remained a hotbed of religious dissent. In 1612 [[John Cotton]] became the Vicar of St Botolph's and, although viewed askance by the Chur ...ries so it is not surprising to find that was so here, in the town of John Cotton but the end of the 19th and the early 20th century were a high point in cra
    22 KB (3,685 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...sufficient in wheat. Crops included corn, rice, barley, wheat, vegetables, cotton, fruits and nuts. Livestock are reared in a nomadic or aemi-nomadic manor.
    11 KB (1,666 words) - 16:25, 24 March 2024
  • ...taneo, Manda G. et al. "Farm-scale evaluation of the impacts of transgenic cotton on biodiversity, pesticide use, and yield." Proceedings of the National Aca
    11 KB (1,841 words) - 04:04, 16 February 2010
  • ...onized but not infected until the plant is matured. ''A. flavus'' infects cotton by entering from natural openings and traveling up into the boll. In the bo
    11 KB (1,735 words) - 02:38, 24 October 2013
  • ...that their husbands sign contracts obligating the whole family to work on cotton, and by declaring that unemployed freedwomen should be treated as vagrants
    11 KB (1,643 words) - 01:10, 19 October 2010
  • ...[maize]], [[potato]]es, [[vegetable]]s, [[sugar beet]]s, [[pome fruit]], [[cotton]], [[canola]] or [[rapeseed]], [[stone fruit]], [[pasture]], [[citrus]], [[
    10 KB (1,538 words) - 15:31, 8 March 2023
  • ...as observed by Ter-Avanesyan in 1949. All three studied species of plants (cotton plant, black-eyed pea, and wheat) showed dependence in the direction foreca
    11 KB (1,652 words) - 15:25, 25 February 2023
  • ...s of slaveholders, must be made our allies. If the slaves no longer raised cotton and rice, tobacco and grain for the rebels, this war would cease in six mon
    12 KB (1,823 words) - 16:40, 22 March 2023
  • ...Appomattox, he made his way to New Orleans and entered business there as a cotton factor, then expanded his reach into railroad investments and the managemen ...onal Globe'', 42 Cong., 2 Sess., pp. 246-47</ref> he denounced the federal cotton tax as robbery <ref>Ibid., pp. 2730-33</ref> and defended separate schools
    24 KB (3,389 words) - 11:44, 21 March 2011
  • ...ized brushes, foam-tipped tools, and spatula-like metal tools. An ordinary cotton swab can be useful. A number of sponges and applicators used for facial cos
    13 KB (2,209 words) - 10:13, 18 May 2010
  • ...ued that slavery was both efficient and profitable as long as the price of cotton was high enough. In turn Fogel came under sharp attack.
    12 KB (1,821 words) - 03:40, 27 October 2013
  • .... ''Communities of Kinship: Antebellum Families and the Settlement of the Cotton Frontier.'' (2004) 215 pp.
    13 KB (1,704 words) - 05:52, 18 October 2013
  • ...can Civil War, preventing the Confederate States of America from exporting cotton prevented the South from getting both hard currency, and the goods that cou
    13 KB (1,919 words) - 04:39, 5 April 2024
  • *Cotton-top Tamarin ''[[Saguinus oedipus ]]''
    15 KB (2,008 words) - 04:59, 21 May 2012
  • ...ation. They though "Cotton is King!"--that is the Southern monopoly of raw cotton would force British and European industrialists to support southern indepen ...of Lincoln in 1860 was the final trigger for secession for the deep South Cotton states. During the secession crisis, many sought compromise—of these atte
    73 KB (11,304 words) - 22:36, 25 March 2024
  • ...n India and the Caribbean in exchange for American limits on the export of cotton.
    13 KB (2,009 words) - 13:53, 16 October 2010
  • [[Cotton-top Tamarin]]: {{r|Saguinus oedipus }}
    15 KB (1,685 words) - 16:02, 13 August 2011
  • ...ffending instrument may be anything from a fingernail to a matchstick to a cotton earbud (this may of course be equally risky for causing an ear drum perfora ...cian’s beautiful nails are clearly dangerous instruments, the soft tips of cotton ear buds are deceptively harmless, and one of the very common causes of hur
    43 KB (7,022 words) - 00:13, 26 October 2013
  • # [[Cotton]]
    12 KB (1,457 words) - 08:39, 22 April 2024
  • The duralumin frame was covered by cotton varnished with [[iron oxide]] and [[cellulose]] [[acetate]] [[butyrate]] im ...lications/balloon_life/9801/0112/hindenburg0112.pdf Hindenburg]</ref>. The cotton cover with its coating, was quite flammable (this is disputed), and the hea
    26 KB (4,090 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • Mushkin, Selma J., and John F. Cotton. Sharing Federal Funds for State and Local Needs; Grants-in-Aid and Ppb Sys
    14 KB (1,883 words) - 15:46, 9 February 2008
  • ...olinians, who concluded that they would pay more for imports and sell less cotton abroad, so their economic interest was being unfairly injured. They attemp ...e relevance to the southern and western farmers who exported most of their cotton, tobacco and wheat.
    26 KB (3,957 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...French, in 1886, adopted smokeless powder made of [[nitrocellulose]] (gun-cotton). Four years later, the Royal Navy began using smokeless powder made from a
    14 KB (2,181 words) - 09:14, 5 May 2024
  • ...nd, together with his brother-in-law, bought 920 acres (370 ha) of land, a cotton plantation near [[Coffeeville, Mississippi]]. He ran this plantation for th
    30 KB (4,690 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • Born to a wealthy Texas family with sugar and cotton plantations, House was educated in New England prep schools and went on to
    13 KB (2,052 words) - 10:26, 26 September 2007
  • *[[F. Albert Cotton]]
    14 KB (1,549 words) - 05:42, 6 March 2024
  • ...om the best of [[Mark Twain]]&mdash;and the other half from the worst of [[Cotton Mather]]." But he asserted that "Steinbeck didn't need the [[Nobel Prize]]&
    15 KB (2,448 words) - 00:06, 9 March 2023
  • ...ter 1850. Their southern leaders nearly all owned slaves and were called "cotton Whigs." The northeastern Whigs, led by [[Daniel Webster]], represented bus
    16 KB (2,346 words) - 16:50, 22 March 2023
  • ...tsburgh, and at the age of thirteen, young Andrew found his first job in a cotton factory as a bobbin-boy at $1.20 a week. William Carnegie failed to make a At age 14 the boy left the cotton mill, which he disliked intensely, to become a messenger for a local telegr
    28 KB (4,409 words) - 14:07, 10 February 2023
  • ...and mosses, which are adapted to wet and nutrient-poor conditions.{{Image|Cotton grass.JPG|right|220px|Cottongrass on peat bank (Bleaklow)}} Heather, bilbe
    15 KB (2,531 words) - 13:43, 15 June 2022
  • ...roduce [[food]] or valuable [[commodity|commodities]] (such as [[wool]], [[cotton]], or [[silk]]), and to enjoy as [[pet]]s or [[ornamental plant]]s. Plants
    18 KB (2,690 words) - 10:14, 26 March 2024
  • ...tsburgh, and at the age of thirteen, young Andrew found his first job in a cotton factory as a bobbin-boy at $1.20 a week. William Carnegie failed to make a At age 14 the boy left the cotton mill, which he disliked intensely, to become a messenger for a local telegr
    29 KB (4,497 words) - 12:26, 24 August 2013
  • ...e living God we draped them. Which accounts for the rise of the Lancashire cotton industry."<ref>Ibid., page 126</ref>
    15 KB (2,473 words) - 07:52, 31 May 2009
  • ...ined that the agitation was bad for their strong business ties to southern cotton planters.
    30 KB (4,401 words) - 09:38, 6 August 2023
  • ...r horses, mules and cattle; fences and barns were in disrepair. Prices for cotton had plunged. The rebuilding would take years and require outside investment ...ensive and unnecessary for a region where the vast majority of people were cotton or tobacco farmers. One historian found that the schools were not very effe
    57 KB (8,536 words) - 10:16, 16 August 2023
  • ...logy, education, industry, and social arrangements, the South pursued more cotton lands and more slaves. In the north, a person's station was often determin ...hesapeake were barely prosperous and survived by selling off slaves to the cotton states. The South's population was increasing (but not as fast as the Nort
    81 KB (12,537 words) - 14:35, 9 February 2024
  • ...tration]]. This agency negotiated restrictions on the production of corn, cotton, dairy products, hogs, rice, tobacco, and wheat, and compensated farmers fo
    17 KB (2,599 words) - 20:46, 25 June 2010
  • ...rdage.</ref> The hemp growers and rope makers sought protective tariffs on cotton bagging and ropes, the market was the lower South, which insisted upon free
    15 KB (2,299 words) - 12:19, 3 November 2007
  • ...supply sources also sell commercial fuels like pulped paper and compressed cotton, or even aerosol cans of smoke.
    17 KB (2,794 words) - 09:00, 17 December 2023
  • ...a political base and to exemplify the campaign against the use of imported cotton by promoting homespun. He also began to change his clothing: the once dap
    15 KB (2,505 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...f North Carolina. She brought to Douglas the new responsibility of a large cotton plantation in [[Lawrence County, Mississippi]] worked by slaves. To Douglas
    17 KB (2,733 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...h>29<td>Blé<td bgcolor="#f9f9f9">[[Wheat]]<td>Coton<td bgcolor="#f9f9f9">[[Cotton]]<td>Marron<td bgcolor="#f9f9f9">[[Horse chestnut]]
    24 KB (4,421 words) - 09:15, 6 March 2024
  • The recommended type of clothing items to wear are comfortable cotton socks, and anything that doesn't inhibit one's ability to roll the ball dow
    20 KB (3,135 words) - 11:20, 25 February 2021
  • ...Democrats. The [[Populist Party]] had considerable support in 1892 among cotton and wheat farmers, as well as coal miners and silver miners.
    16 KB (2,375 words) - 15:27, 19 January 2024
  • ...he older seaboard slave states, with their declining economies to the rich cotton states of the southwest; many others were sold and moved locally.<ref> Roth
    16 KB (2,397 words) - 14:39, 9 February 2024
  • .... The economy continued to improve,in the areas of [[cattle ranching]], [[cotton]], [[wheat]], and especially, [[oil]]. Throughout the 1920's, new oil fiel
    18 KB (2,691 words) - 16:05, 15 April 2024
  • ...reports of "the fabulous sums of money to be made in the South in raising cotton." The investors were warmly received.<ref>Foner 1988 pp 137, 194 </ref> Ho
    18 KB (2,791 words) - 09:02, 9 August 2023
  • ...region travelled to the caravels in canoes and traded with the Portuguese cotton, ivory and malagueta pepper, both in grain and in the pod (this is the firs
    19 KB (3,222 words) - 23:23, 19 February 2010
  • ...here. During [[Prohibition]], [[speakeasies]] and nightclubs such as the [[Cotton Club]] lined [[Washington Boulevard (Los Angeles)|Washington Boulevard]].
    18 KB (2,667 words) - 07:19, 28 March 2023
  • ...l prohibit and restrain the carrying any Molasses, Sugar, Coffee, Cocoa or Cotton in American vessels, either from His Majesty's Islands or from the United S
    30 KB (5,208 words) - 13:05, 16 October 2010
  • ...bread [[wheat]] ( an allohexaploid having three component genomes) , and [[cotton]] are two other examples <ref>J. A. Udall and J. F. Wendel (2006) Polyploi
    22 KB (3,139 words) - 14:32, 2 February 2023
  • ...e pollutants include coal workers, construction workers, metal workers and cotton workers, amongst others. However, in most cases these pollutants are combin ...e journal| author=Bucknall CE, Miller G, Lloyd SM, Cleland J, McCluskey S, Cotton M et al.| title=Glasgow supported self-management trial (GSuST) for patient
    48 KB (6,593 words) - 11:52, 2 February 2023
  • .... Fabrics may be made from a variety or fibers, including vegetable (e.g. cotton, hemp, and jute for weak alkalis), animal (e.g. wool or horsehair for weak
    23 KB (3,700 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...omething wrong, maybe it's a problem with the template -- see [[F. Albert Cotton]], perhaps the first TI Workgroup's checklisted.</s> BTW, I believe this Wo
    25 KB (4,200 words) - 09:15, 16 April 2024
  • ...>The Eli Whitney Museum 'Cotton Gin: A History' [http://www.eliwhitney.org/cotton.htm]</ref>, so is the miracle of the MP3 format often blamed for blindsidin
    47 KB (7,475 words) - 05:49, 8 April 2024
  • ...nd altered polymorphonuclear cell function. <ref>Piagnerelli M, Rapotec A, Cotton F, Vincent JL. (2006). ''Iron Administration in the Critically III''. Semin
    24 KB (3,263 words) - 14:11, 25 June 2010
  • <td align="center"><font face="Calibri" size=3>Reverend Reynell Cotton</td> <td align="center"><font face="Calibri" size=3>James Cotton</td>
    133 KB (20,397 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • design of fluffy woollen army uniforms for the winter and cotton
    22 KB (3,530 words) - 12:07, 10 November 2009
  • ...at shipped munitions and luxuries into the South and bringing out a little cotton and tobacco.
    21 KB (3,197 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...entury, Virginia grew less rapidly than industrial states to the north, or cotton states to the south. The state exported young people and slaves to form pla Virginia was a slave state but refused to join the cotton states in the new Confederacy until Lincoln called for troops to invade the
    65 KB (10,005 words) - 11:19, 7 March 2024
  • ...including steel from [[Sheffield]], woollens from Bradford and Leeds, and cotton goods from Manchester. The center of the Crystal Palace was dominated by gl
    24 KB (3,849 words) - 07:33, 20 April 2024
  • ...ed in the U.S. since the 19th century. One of the early leaders was [[John Cotton Dana]]. Library instruction is closely related to the study of [[informatio
    26 KB (3,877 words) - 18:42, 3 March 2024
  • OK, I added a core article on [[cotton]] with three pix. I've got lots more pix, so I'll probably add more, but it
    25 KB (3,941 words) - 05:06, 8 March 2024
  • ...r the situation went out of control, [[Puritans|Puritan]] preachers like [[Cotton Mather]] encouraged the local authorities to vigorously prosecute the 'witc
    26 KB (4,296 words) - 08:17, 20 January 2024
  • * Bond Horace M. ''Negro Education in Alabama: A Study in Cotton and Steel.'' (1939).
    30 KB (4,088 words) - 02:15, 7 December 2011
  • ...ng]] after removing the needles, affecting about 3% of patients. Holding a cotton ball for about one minute over the site usually stops the bleeding.
    31 KB (4,744 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...[[azo]] and [[formazan]] form washfast covalent bonds with fibres such as cotton.
    37 KB (5,836 words) - 05:36, 6 March 2024
  • ...the position of the South vis-à-vis the North was created not by slavery, cotton, or states' rights, but by the two regions' misunderstanding of each other.
    28 KB (4,311 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • White Southerners abandoned cotton and tobacco farming, and moved to the cities where the New Deal programs ha
    29 KB (4,273 words) - 16:45, 27 January 2023
  • ...at shipped munitions and luxuries into the South and bringing out a little cotton and tobacco.
    28 KB (4,210 words) - 11:12, 30 March 2024
  • ...as cellulose is the primary component of their cell walls. In the form of cotton fibers, cellulose is an important textile raw material.
    36 KB (5,455 words) - 11:49, 6 September 2013
  • ...as cellulose is the primary component of their cell walls. In the form of cotton fibers, cellulose is an important textile raw material.
    36 KB (5,455 words) - 08:57, 12 September 2013
  • At its height, though, over 30,000 people were employed by the 32 cotton-manufacturing companies that owned the textile factories of New Bedford (wh
    28 KB (4,410 words) - 14:18, 9 February 2024
  • ...ged, especially in the South. Large numbers of African Americans left the cotton fields, headed for the cities. Housing was increasingly difficult to find i
    30 KB (4,659 words) - 14:33, 2 February 2023
  • # The boll weevil infestation of the [[cotton]] fields of the South in the late 1910s, reduced the demand for [[sharecrop
    32 KB (4,157 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...related industries. Major agricultural crops include rice, wheat, oilseed, cotton, jute, tea, sugarcane, and potatoes. The agricultural sector accounts for 2
    34 KB (4,996 words) - 16:14, 19 April 2024
  • ...lourished until the American Civil War in 1861 cut off the supplies of raw cotton; the industry never recovered. However, by that time Scotland had developed
    68 KB (10,286 words) - 17:33, 11 March 2024
  • ...up the crime, Evers involved him. He and others from the NAACP dressed as cotton pickers to work undercover and find details of the crime. Their work led to
    36 KB (5,700 words) - 12:59, 24 March 2024
  • ...815. The miners, less menaced by imported labor or machines than were the cotton operatives, had begun to form unions and fight to control wages and working
    35 KB (5,511 words) - 10:14, 28 February 2024
  • ...ericans arrived from the South--whites from Appalachia and blacks from the cotton fields due south. The near south side was the first Black area, and it con
    35 KB (5,207 words) - 12:59, 22 June 2023
  • ...xports only fell in half. Hardest hit were farm commodities such as wheat, cotton, tobacco, and lumber. Many American farms had been heavily mortgaged as far
    52 KB (8,210 words) - 10:49, 23 February 2024
  • ...journals and were written by ministers or inspired by religious beliefs. [[Cotton Mather]], a Boston minister published ''Magnalia Christi Americana'' (The G
    44 KB (6,636 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • One of these teachers (Miss Allen of Illinois), whose school was at Cotton Gin Port in Monroe County, was visited ... between one and two o'clock in t
    46 KB (7,201 words) - 13:50, 9 April 2024
  • Wheat, corn and soybeans are grown on in the [[Midwest]]. Soybeans and cotton are important in the South, but tobacco is being phased out after 400 years
    39 KB (5,596 words) - 14:20, 8 March 2024
  • ...he French in 1886 adopted smokeless powder made of [[nitrocellulose]] (gun-cotton). Four years later, the Royal Navy began using smokeless powder made from a
    47 KB (7,596 words) - 15:31, 4 April 2024
  • ...pliant leather prepared from the skin of the chamois or from sheepskin; a cotton fabric made in imitation of chamois leather'' |'''chenille'''—a wool, cotton, silk, or rayon yarn with protruding pile; a pile-face fabric with a fillin
    63 KB (10,748 words) - 20:33, 4 May 2017
  • ...rth; far more people graduated from high school and college. Meanwhile the cotton and tobacco basis of the traditional South faded away, as former farmers mo
    50 KB (7,415 words) - 09:27, 11 September 2023
  • ...heat and corn. On the lower lying areas coconuts, pineapples, cashew nuts, cotton, sugarcane, sisal, and corn are all grown, following a similar subsistence
    47 KB (7,061 words) - 06:19, 24 December 2015
  • ...from the North and more opportunities for higher education. Meanwhile, the cotton and tobacco economy of the traditional rural South faded away, as former fa
    52 KB (7,770 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...avy armor at nearly all times and appeared in the flowing robes of silk or cotton which were the traditional habit of the Muslims.
    53 KB (8,332 words) - 13:11, 8 March 2024
  • .... Its traditional agricultural products include wheat, corn, barley, rice, cotton, fruit, nuts, and grapes. However, its agricultural economy has suffered co
    61 KB (9,201 words) - 05:11, 31 March 2024
  • ...end the money, and to supervise the purchase of large quantities of food, cotton, machinery and explosives. Surprisingly, Germany, with its large, efficient
    53 KB (8,509 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...relevant because the DPRK exhibited broken ceramic bomb-shaped containers, cotton waste, and dead insects. The Japanese weapons used ceramic cases and releas
    68 KB (9,925 words) - 16:57, 29 March 2024
  • * Owsley, Frank Lawrence. ''King Cotton Diplomacy: Foreign relations of the Confederate States of America'' (1931)
    82 KB (11,425 words) - 14:08, 10 February 2023
  • |cotton (sewing), thread
    61 KB (9,656 words) - 09:17, 2 March 2024
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