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Box 8

 Container

Contains 245 Results:

Item 140: Unloading Sisal Hemp, Mobile, Alabama

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Color image shows workmen unloading hemp from a ship onto the dock. Many workers visible on ship and on dock. Railroad cars are adjacent to the dock on the left. Adolph Selige Pub. Co., , St. Louis - Leipzig - Halberstadt. ca. 1902-1907. 14 x 9 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 141: The Old Antebellum Cotton Press, 1908

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents Color image of an old cotton press, several portions of which appear to be falling down or missing. A man and a dog can be seen standing next to it on the left. Printed on the reverse of the card: "The Old Antebellum Cotton Press. Each plantation had its own gin and cotton press, operated by mule power. The seed cotton was held in a box, inside of which was a grate of steel bars; between this were notched steel discs, which rotated rapidly and separated the fibre from the seeds; a cylinder...
Dates: 1908

Item 142: Ox Team with Cotton Seed, 1903

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Color image shows a wooden cart with bags of cotton seed being drawn by a team of four oxen. A man sits by the cart and another person is partially visible in the background in front of a brick building. "Phostint" card made only by Detroit Publishing Company. Detroit Photographic Company. 14 x 9 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1903

Item 143: Sorting Wool after Cleaning and Washing, Lawrence, Mass.

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents Sorting Wool after Cleaning and Washing, Lawrence, Mass. Black-and-white image of men working at tables hand-pulling wool as part of sorting process. In the foreground, a man is surrounded by piles of wool and baskets into which the wool is separated. He is grading the wool: the wool from the back and sides of the fleece is put in the Grade A basket; Grade B is from the lower parts of the fleece; and Grade C is the "rag tag" from the legs. Location unidentified here, but background dividers...
Dates: 1842-2003

Item 144: A tour through Messrs Lupton and Co's Woolen Mills, Leeds, 1773-1958: wool sorting

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents Black-and-white image shows a male worker standing at a table piled with wool. The area is filled with baskets and bales of wool. Printed on reverse: "On arrival from Australia the raw wool was taken to the company's Cliffe Mills, Pudsey, for 'Sorting and Grading.'" Number one in a series of eight by Armley Mills, Leeds Museum of Science and Industry. Printed by E.T.W. Dennis & Sons, Ltd., Scarborough. This postcard was likely printed in 1982 as the Leeds Museum of Science and Industry...
Dates: 1842-2003

Item 145: Jute Preparing

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Black-and-white image shows rows of machines through which the jute is pulled and dropped into roving cans on the floor next to the machines. Carter's Series, No. 53. [Printed in Great Britain] [no earlier than 1902] 14 x 9 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 146: Jute Softening and Weighing

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Black-and-white image shows bins of raw jute material. Two workmen are in the foreground, one weighing the material on a scale. Carter's Series, No. 51. [Printed in Great Britain] [no earlier than 1902] 14 x 8.75 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 147: Wool scales

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Tolson Memorial Museum, Huddersfield, England. [no later than 1962] Black and white image shows large scale used to weigh wool. 9 x 14 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1842-2003

Item 148: Wool sorting, 1910

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 4
Scope and Contents

Stockton, Calif. Black-and-white image shows male workers sorting wool; large bags of wool and piles of wool visible on floor. Dated and postmarked Mar. 11, 1910 in Stockton, Calif. Addressed to Mr. E.H. Tryon in San Francisco with a note including "This is a picture of some of Cornings choice Fall wools." 14 x 8.5 cm.

Format: Postcard.

Dates: 1910

Item 1: Opening and feeding the cotton, first process in making cotton cloth, White Oak Mills, Greensboro, N.C., 1907

 File — Box: 8, Folder: 5
Scope and Contents Black-and-white image shows workmen adding batches of cotton into automatic feeders made by the Kitson Machine Co., Lowell, Mass. An automatic feeder is a kind of opening machine for processing cotton that ordinarily has already been through a bale breaker, or which has not been highly compressed. Its main objects are to further open and clean the cotton and maintain a uniform flow to the succeeding machine. The worker in the foreground appears to be African American. From the "Perfec"...
Dates: 1907