Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 05.djvu/564

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COTTON.
480
COTTON.

bales; East Indies, etc., 1,562,000 bales; Egypt, 1,228,000 bales; Brazil, etc., 250,000 bales, or a total of 12,177,000 bales of 500 pounds each.

Cotton in the United States. The first authentic record of cotton cultivation in the United States was at Jamestown, Va., in 1607. Sea Island cotton was introduced from the West Indies in 1786. The first exportation was in 1747, when eight bags were sent to England, the first shipment of any importance being 2000 pounds in 1770. In 1791, 189,316 pounds were exported; Whitney's invention of the saw gin in 1793 raised this amount to 17,789,803 pounds by 1800. The production reached 2,160,000,000 pounds in 1860, and amounted to 4,506,000,000 pounds in 1895 (9,467,000 bales reckoned at 484 lbs. net each). Cheapening the processes of cultivation and cleaning, and increase of acreage, have so lowered the cost of the fibre that while the average price in Liverpool was 1s. 6d. (say 36 cents) per pound in 1793, it was 5¾d. (say 11½ cents) in 1851; averaging 7d. (14 cents) for the five years ending 1861. In 1867 there was a decline from the high prices consequent upon the Civil War to 7⅜d. (14¾ cents), but in a few months it reached 1s. 1d. (26 cents). In 1890 it ranged from 5 9-16d. to 6¾d. in Liverpool, from 10¼ cents to 12¾ cents in New York; while in 1899 the range of price in New York was from 5 5-16 cents to 6⅝ cents, with an average of about 6 cents per pound, the 1900 values being considerably higher.

The acreage in cotton of the ten cotton-growing States for the season of 1899-1900 was as follows:

STATE Acres.
North Carolina  1,220,000
South Carolina   2,212,000
Georgia  3,288,000
Florida    149,000
Alabama  2,883,000
Mississippi  2,784,000
Louisiana  1,179,000
Texas  6,642,000
Arkansas  1,726,000
Tennessee    816,000
All others    622,000

 Total 23,521,000

The accompanying Table No. 1, taken from Bulletin No. 58, census of 1900, gives the cotton crop in the United States by States, according to censuses of 1870, 1880, 1890, and 1900, for the crops of the preceding year. The bale measurement of 1890 was 477 pounds; in 1880 it was 433 pounds; in 1870 it was 440 pounds. It is interesting to note the States in which cotton has at some time been cultivated. The Bulletin states that “early settlers north of the Ohio River planted cotton for domestic uses between 1749 and 1780. The census for 1860 gave for Illinois 1482 bales, or 659,490 pounds of cotton. Stimulated by the high prices following the Civil War, the cultivation of cotton was conducted to a limited extent in California, Illinois, Indiana, Nevada, Utah, and West Virginia. With the coming of low prices, cotton culture gradually disappeared from those sections not peculiarly adapted to it, and censuses after 1870 credited none to California, Illinois, Indiana, Nevada, Utah, or West Virginia. Natural selection continues to eliminate the industry from sections less favored by climatic conditions. To illustrate: Kentucky is credited by the censuses of 1880 and 1890 with 1367 and 873 bales respectively, but the census of 1900 finds in this State only 84 commercial bales. The loss in those States lying along the northern border of the cotton belt is more than offset by the increase found in the territory west and southwest of the Mississippi River. According to the Eleventh Census 2,872,524 bales, or 38 per cent. of the entire American crop of 1889, was grown in that region, while in the census of 1900, in the same territory, the production reaches 4,250,940 bales, or 45 per cent. of the whole crop.”

Table I.—Cotton Grown in the United States in the Years 1869, 1879, 1889, and 1899 (in Bales)[1]


STATE 1869 1879 1889 1899    Per ct. of Total 


 Actual No.   Equivalent No. 
in 500 lb. bales
1870 1900








Alabama 429,482  699,654 915,210  1,103,690  1,078,519  14.2 11.5
Arkansas 247,968  608,256 691,494  719,453  705,583   8.2  7.6
California 34  .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......
Florida 39,789   54,997 57,928  56,821  49,359   1.3   .5
Georgia 473,934  814,441 1,191,846  1,296,844  1,231,060  15.8 13.2
Illinois 465  .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......
Indiana .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......
Indian Territory  ..........   17,000 34,115  160,324  143,608  ......  1.5
Kansas .......... 212  121  121  ...... ......
Kentucky 1,080    1,367 873  84  79  ...... ......
Louisiana 350,832  508,569 659,180  708,508  700,352  11.7  7.5
Mississippi 564,938  963,111 1,154,725  1,264,048  1,237,666  18.8 13.2
Missouri 1,246   20,318 15,856  19,377  20,275    .1   .2
Nevada 106  .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......
North Carolina 144,935  389,598 336,261  473,155  440,400   4.8  4.7
Oklahoma ..........  .......... 425  84,035  71,983  ......   .8
South Carolina  224,500  522,548 747,190  876,545  837,105   7.5  9.0
Tennessee 181,842  330,621 190,579  215,175  211,641   6.0  2.3
Texas 350,628  805,284 1,471,242  2,658,555  2,609,018  11.6 27.9
Utah 22  .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......
Virginia 183   19,595 5,375  9,239  8,622  ......   .1
West Virginia .......... ..........  ..........  ..........  ...... ......







 Total  3,011,996   5,755,359     7,472,511  9,645,974  9,345,391  100 100.9

The value of the exports of cotton from the United States between the years 1895-99 averaged $213,378,243 a year. The United Kingdom took 49 per cent.; Germany, 22 per cent.; France, 11 per. cent.; Italy, 5.2 per cent.: Spain, 3.8 per cent.; Belgium, 1.8 per cent.; Japan, 1.7 per cent.; Russia, 1.6 per cent.; and Canada, 1.5 per cent.

  1. Calculated on basis of 500-lb. bales.