Reconstruction of the post-Civil War South was fueled in part by entrepreneurs who moved south for plentiful nonunion labor, readily available land and geographic closeness to raw materials. Although extensive documentation exists about textile and apparel manufacturing in Northeast U.S. communities (e.g., Kulik, Parks, & Penn, 1982), with a few exceptions, limited documentation exists about Southern textile and apparel manufacturing. Exceptions, such as the case study of West Point Manufacturing Company (AL), concentrate primarily on mill life (Blythe, 2003). This study focuses on technological changes and documentation of these changes in textile and apparel manufacturing buildings
Onasburg, homespun, and linsey-woolsey (Warner & Parker, 1990), broadcloth and Negro cloth (Hunt & S...
Textile manufacturing played a significant role in the industrialization of Connecticut. It was the ...
At the height of apparel manufacturing in the United States in the 1970s, approximately 24,500 estab...
Throughout the southeastern region of the United States it is common to find towns that were built b...
Despite the South\u27s defeat in the Civil War and the economic hardships occasioned by the conflict...
Selected articles on Southern textile factories published in Civil War era newspapers
This presentation will compare and contrast people working in eastern Tennessee in commercial textil...
Texas textile mills comprise an untold part of the modern South. The bulk of Texas mills were built ...
Technological change and product life cycle concepts can be used to explain the concentration of cot...
The West Georgia Heritage Textile Trail (WGTHT) at the University of West Georgia connects regional ...
In the decades preceding the civil war, coverlets became popular in white rural American households,...
Three major periods of change occurred within the American cotton textile industry from 1830 to the ...
Analysis of southern naval stores production, an industry in many respects more representative of so...
During the first half of of the nineteenth century the United States emerged as a major producer of ...
Textile production was one of the many routine tasks performed in the early American home. Those who...
Onasburg, homespun, and linsey-woolsey (Warner & Parker, 1990), broadcloth and Negro cloth (Hunt & S...
Textile manufacturing played a significant role in the industrialization of Connecticut. It was the ...
At the height of apparel manufacturing in the United States in the 1970s, approximately 24,500 estab...
Throughout the southeastern region of the United States it is common to find towns that were built b...
Despite the South\u27s defeat in the Civil War and the economic hardships occasioned by the conflict...
Selected articles on Southern textile factories published in Civil War era newspapers
This presentation will compare and contrast people working in eastern Tennessee in commercial textil...
Texas textile mills comprise an untold part of the modern South. The bulk of Texas mills were built ...
Technological change and product life cycle concepts can be used to explain the concentration of cot...
The West Georgia Heritage Textile Trail (WGTHT) at the University of West Georgia connects regional ...
In the decades preceding the civil war, coverlets became popular in white rural American households,...
Three major periods of change occurred within the American cotton textile industry from 1830 to the ...
Analysis of southern naval stores production, an industry in many respects more representative of so...
During the first half of of the nineteenth century the United States emerged as a major producer of ...
Textile production was one of the many routine tasks performed in the early American home. Those who...
Onasburg, homespun, and linsey-woolsey (Warner & Parker, 1990), broadcloth and Negro cloth (Hunt & S...
Textile manufacturing played a significant role in the industrialization of Connecticut. It was the ...
At the height of apparel manufacturing in the United States in the 1970s, approximately 24,500 estab...