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Emancipation and Empire: Reconstructing the Worldwide Web of Cotton Production in the Age of the American Civil War A Photo Essay By Collin Lewis and Matt Fischer

Cotton photo essay

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Collin Lewis and Matt Fischer

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Page 1: Cotton photo essay

Emancipation and Empire: Reconstructing the

Worldwide Web of Cotton Production in the Age of the American Civil War

A Photo EssayBy Collin Lewis and Matt Fischer

Page 2: Cotton photo essay

1860- A map representing the locations of the highest production of cotton. The southern United States made up for sometimes over 90 percent of cotton consumption used in countries like France and Europe. Prior to 1861, almost all of the cotton used in the industry came from slave labor plantations in

the American South.

Page 3: Cotton photo essay

1895- A photograph of slaves picking cotton in a field, while a white overseer watches from his horse. Slave labor was essential to the cotton industry, as

the United States made up a large percent of the hundreds of millions of pounds of cotton which made its way around the world each year. Every

person involved in the cotton industry relied on slaves, who were essentially the only source of cotton picking labor available.

Page 4: Cotton photo essay

March 14th, 1862- A political cartoon published in the Richmond Daily Dispatch was made to show English dependency and value of the United

States' cash crop. The depiction of the Englishmen worshipping “King Cotton” was meant to depict the reliance on the Southern United States’ cotton

export.

Page 5: Cotton photo essay

1907- “King Cotton” a panoramic photo of a cotton plantation, published as a magazine advertisement. “King Cotton” was used as a slogan to show the

importance that U.S. Cotton had in the world market. The slogan was used to show support of slave labor plantations, establishing that cotton was too important of an industry to the United States to be disbanded by the Civil

War.

Page 6: Cotton photo essay

1920- A group of African American workers pick cotton in a plantation field. After the Civil War, many former slaves continued to work on plantations for little pay. In an attempt to preserve the cotton industry of the United States,

plantation owners would sometimes keep their “workers" in slave-like conditions, however would pay them a small amount of money in order to be

considered a job.

Page 7: Cotton photo essay

This is a table that shows us British cotton imports from different countries around the world. If shows us that right before the civil war, the U.S is clearly the dominant cotton producer.

However, after the civil war, it is very evident the U.S production goes way down because slavery has been abolished. Also, other countries around the world have ramped up production,

particularly India.

Page 8: Cotton photo essay

This picture is designed to show what the conditions were like for African Americans under the oppressive fetters of slavery before the civil war. Before the Industrial Revolution, all the

intensive, rigorous work done to produce cotton suitable for daily tasks was done by slaves. They weren’t paid, given long, tiring hours, and treated awfully by white slave owners. The Industrial

Revolution changed the way cotton was mass produced with all the new cotton mills made.

Page 9: Cotton photo essay

This is a picture of the cotton mills that became a trademark in the new age of cotton production after the civil war. With the end of slavery also came the Industrial Revolution, where machinery

became a part of the workplace. With this advance in technology, the work slaves did prior to the civil war was now able to be completed more efficiently.

Page 10: Cotton photo essay

This is a digital cartoon that sums up how cotton was used in America.Cotton is shown here to be the primary crop that is used by a diverse

group in the United States. It shows African Americans doing themanual labor to make and manufacture it for the white Americans to use

in their everyday life. It was a cycle that America adapted to for solong, until the end of the civil war when the producers of cotton, orslaves, were freed, and they needed to find a new manufacturer of

cotton.

Page 11: Cotton photo essay

This picture is a chart depicting the distribution of cotton production all around the world in 2010. Compared to where cotton was produced after the civil war in the Industrial Revolution

Era, cotton production today is much more spread out among nearly all the continents, including all different countries in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia. Immediately after the Civil War, cotton was primarily produced in different parts of Europe,

Africa, and India.

Page 12: Cotton photo essay

Pictography" Southern U.S. cotton picking ." Library of Congress Home. N.p., n.d. Web.

17 June 2013. <http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012648381/>.

"King Cotton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia." Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 June 2013.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Cotton>.

., the honor of North-Carolina. May God defend the right! . .. " Causing the Civil War | Teachinghistory.org ." Teachinghistory.org . N.p., n.d. Web. 17

June 2013. <http://teachinghistory.org/history-content/beyond-the-textbook/23912>.

"The American Civil War: March 14, 1862: Cotton and Ironclads." The American Civil War. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 June 2013. <http://www.civilwar-

online.com/2012/03/march-14-1862-cotton-and-ironclads.html>.

Page 13: Cotton photo essay

Pictography"Cultural Landscape of Plantation--SLAVE TASKS." The George Washington University. N.p., n.d.

Web. 17 June 2013. <http://www.gwu.edu/~folklife/bighouse/panel9.html>.

“Distribution of World Cotton Fibre Production.” Digital Chart. History of Cotton: Wikipedia. Accessed on 17 June 2013.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cotton.

John Gensor. “The Cotton Mill.” Photo. The Dawn of the Industrial Revolution in America: John Gensor

Photography. Accessed on 17 June 2013. http://johngensorphotos.com/?tag=baltimore-and-ohio-railroad

“Cotton Competition.” Digital Table. Useful Nineteenth Century Time Series Data. Accessed on 17

June 2013. http://facweb.furman.edu/~bensonlloyd/hst41/timeseries.htm

“Cotton is King.” Digital Cartoon. Studio Up! Cotton is King – Interactive. Accessed on 17 June 2013.

http://www.studioup.com/portfolio/?projects=cotton-is-king-interactive

“Slaves Picking Cotton.” Digital Cartoon. This Honorable Body: African American Legislatures in 19th Century Tennessee. Accessed on 17 June 2013. http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/History

/blackhistory/