A History of the Cotton Industry  
A Story in Three Continents
Author(s): Anthony Burton
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399057332
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399057332 Price: INR 1413.99
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This book is about technology and how it has changed the lives of people on three continents over the last three hundred years. The development of the cotton industry was the starting point for one of the great turning points in history – the industrial revolution. It began with the importation of cloth into Britain from India and that created a new fashion. As the demand for cotton cloth grew, British inventors began to find ways of making the same cloth using powered machinery and built the first cotton mills. The old way of life of the textile workers was transformed, as work moved from home to factory and thousands of small children were brought in to tend the new machines. If conditions in the cotton towns were bad, they were far worse in America where, thanks to the work of slaves, the country took over the supply of raw material from India. During the American Civil War, Britain turned again to India for its supplies. Today, positions have changed dramatically. India again has a thriving industry, while in Britain only a fraction of the old mills are still at work. The author looks in detail at the technology that produced the changes, but the emphasis is very much on the human stories of the industrialists and their workers, the planters and their slaves in Britain, India and America.
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This book is about technology and how it has changed the lives of people on three continents over the last three hundred years. The development of the cotton industry was the starting point for one of the great turning points in history – the industrial revolution. It began with the importation of cloth into Britain from India and that created a new fashion. As the demand for cotton cloth grew, British inventors began to find ways of making the same cloth using powered machinery and built the first cotton mills. The old way of life of the textile workers was transformed, as work moved from home to factory and thousands of small children were brought in to tend the new machines. If conditions in the cotton towns were bad, they were far worse in America where, thanks to the work of slaves, the country took over the supply of raw material from India. During the American Civil War, Britain turned again to India for its supplies. Today, positions have changed dramatically. India again has a thriving industry, while in Britain only a fraction of the old mills are still at work. The author looks in detail at the technology that produced the changes, but the emphasis is very much on the human stories of the industrialists and their workers, the planters and their slaves in Britain, India and America.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Preface to the First Edition
  • Preface to the Second Edition
  • Chapter 1 Towards a New World
  • Chapter 2 The Flier and the Jenny
  • Chapter 3 Arkwright of Cromford
  • Chapter 4 Failure in India
  • Chapter 5 The Slave States
  • Chapter 6 Towards the Factory Age
  • Chapter 7 Mill Children
  • Chapter 8 Cotton Towns
  • Chapter 9 Pawtucket and After
  • Chapter 10 The Planter
  • Chapter 11 Cotton for Lancashire
  • Chapter 12 Success to The Rising of the Whites
  • Chapter 13 The Insurrection of the Blacks
  • Chapter 14 Scapegoats
  • Chapter 15 Civil War
  • Chapter 16 Aftermath
  • Chapter 17 Full Circle
  • Chapter 18 Epilogue
  • Appendix
  • Bibliographical Sources
  • Picture Credits
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