Box 8
Contains 245 Results:
Item 120: Cotton Gin at Muskogee, Oklahoma
Color image depicts rows of horse-drawn carts carying cotton, waiting a turn at the gin. Men stand or sit with the carts. Several wooden buildings are in view along with a water tower and two chimneys. Published by S.H. Kress & Co., Made in U.S.A. ca. 1907-1915. 13.75 x 9 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 121: Cotton Gin, Lawton, Oklahoma
Color image shows a cotton gin in Lawton, Okla., with a two short chimneys on the main building and a tall chimney on the extension to the left. Bales of cotton are lined up along the front walls. Some workers are also in view. ca. 1907-1915. 13.75 x 8.5 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 122: Scene at the Cotton Gin
Color image shows rows of cotton bales stacked next to a wooden building with a chimney, the cotton gin. Two workmen are carrying baskets of cotton, probably heading for the gin. No location given. ca. 1907-1915. 13.5 x 8.5 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 123: Cotton Gin
Black-and-white image shows two wooden buildings. On the left, a bale of cotton is being moved into or out of a horse-drawn cart. In the center is a scale for weighing the cotton; two a man stands in front of it with a huge bag of cotton. On the right, a mule-drawn cart is loaded with giant cotton bales. No location given. Milwaukee, Wis.: E.C. Kropp Co., Publ., ca. 1902-1907. 14 x 9 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 124: Scene at Cotton Gin
Color image shows horse-drawn carts loaded with cotton waiting for their turn at the gin entry. Workmen are in vew at the building dock in background and also alongside the waiting carts. Smaller, residential buildings are in the background on the left. No location given. Published by The Chessler Co., Baltimore, Md. ca. 1915-1930. 14 x 9 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 125: First cotton gin
Black-and-white image depicts a drawing or print of an African American man raking raw cotton through the gin machine. Additional details about cotton gins, the process, and inventor Eli Whitney is provided on reverse side. "This View is Non-Stereoscopic" is printed at the bottom of the stereograph. Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Company, ca. 1900-1920. 17.75 x 9 cm.
Format: Stereoptic print.
Item 126: Cotton gins--one of the greatest industrial inventions--separating fiber from seed--Texas
Item 127: Cotton Gin, 1907
Color image depicts two rows of equipment with a space between. Workmen are at machines on both sides and in the center other workmen appear to be adding cotton to a bag. Message on front includes: "This gives about as good an idea of a cotton gin as one can get from a picture only the press is left out." Adolph Selige Pub. Co., St. Louis--Leipzig. Postmarked Feb. 10, 1907 in Galveston, Tex., and Feb. 13, 1907 in Utica, N.Y. 13.75 x 8.75 cm.
Format: Postcard.
Item 128: A Cotton Gin, 1913
Color image shows row of four ginning machines. A workman appears to be feeding cotton into a shute connected to a pipe at ceiling level; this is probably the suction pipe that brings the cotton into the mechanism of the gin. No location given. Published by T. P. & Co., N.Y. Postmarked Jan. 17, 1913 in Charlotte, N.C. 13.75 x 8.75 cm.
Format: Postcard.