Archive:Eli Whitney (1765-1825)
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Eli Whitney, Inventor of the Cotton Gin
His full ancestry and information about his descendants is available on-line.
From The Free Dictionary:
Eli Whitney (December 8, 1765 - January 8, 1825) was an American inventor and manufacturer who is credited with creating the first cotton gin in 1793. The cotton gin was a mechanical device which removed the seeds from cotton, a process which was until that time extremely labor-intensive.
Whitney's greatest contribution to American industry was the development and implementation of the American System of manufacturing and the assembly line, which he was the first to use when producing muskets for the U.S. Government. Whitney's concepts were later exploited by Henry Ford and others in manufacturing.
There exists question today over whether the cotton gin, which Whitney received a patent for on March 14, 1794, and its constituent elements should rightly be attributed to Eli Whitney; some contend that Catherine Littlefield Greene should be credited with the invention of the cotton gin, or at least its conception. It is known that she associated with Eli Whitney (along with other historical figures such as George and Martha Washington). Some historians believe that this invention allowed for the African slavery system in the Southern United States to become more sustainable at a critical point in its development.
Born in Westborough, Massachusetts, he was graduated from Yale College in 1792. While his ideas were innovative and useful, they were so easy to understand and reproduce that the concepts and designs were readily duplicated by others. Whitney's company that produced cotton gins went out of business in 1797.
He never patented his later inventions, one of which was a milling machine.
Portrait of Eli Whitney:
From the New Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia, Release 6:
Whitney, Eli
The inventor of the cotton gin and a pioneer in the use of mass production methods, Eli Whitney was born in Westboro, Mass., on Dec. 8, 1765, and died on Jan. 8, 1825. He graduated from Yale College in 1792 and by April 1793 had designed and constructed a machine called a cotton gin that quickly and easily separated cottonseed from the short-staple cotton fiber. Whitney's cotton gin was capable of maintaining a daily output of 23 kg (50 lb) of cleaned cotton, and its effect was far-reaching, making southern cotton a profitable crop for the first time. Whitney, however, failed to profit from his invention. Numerous imitations appeared, and his 1794 patent was not validated until 1807.
In 1798, Whitney obtained a government contract to make 10,000 muskets. He demonstrated that machine tools--manned by workers who did not need the highly specialized skills of gunsmiths--could produce standardized parts to exact specifications, and that any part could be used as a component of any musket. The firearms factory he built in New Haven, Conn., was thus one of the first to use mass production methods.
Bibliography:
- Green, Constance McLaughlin, Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology (1956)
- Mirsky, Jeanette, and Nevins, Allan, The World of Eli Whitney (1952; repr. 1962)
- Olmsted, Denison, Memoir of Eli Whitney, Esq. (1846; repr. 1972)
On 17 Mar 1998, Jim Whitney wrote:
- "Eli [Whitney] spent quite a bit of time in the New Haven, Connecticut area, where he studied as a student at Yale. I believe there is a museum at Whitneyville, which is a suburb of New Haven. The museum is in an old mill where he worked on a number of inventions. ....
- "As a bit of trivia, he could not afford to attend Yale after being accepted there and worked as a teacher in Paxton, Massachusetts, a town just north of Worcester in central Massachusetts. The headmaster allowed Eli to stay at his house so he could save his teaching stipend for his Yale expenses. This is how he was able to afford to go to Yale."
Cotton Gin
The cotton gin is a device for removing the seeds from cotton fiber. In ancient India a machine called a charka was developed to separate the seeds from the lint when the fiber was pulled through a set of rollers. The charka worked well on long-staple cotton, but variations of this machine used in colonial America could not be adapted for short-staple cotton. For the latter, cottonseed had to be removed by hand, work that was usually performed by slaves.
A machine for cleaning short-staple cotton was invented by Eli Whitney in 1793. His cotton engine consisted of spiked teeth mounted on a boxed revolving cylinder which, when turned by a crank, pulled the cotton fiber through small slotted openings so as to separate the seeds from the lint. Simultaneously a rotating brush, operated via a belt and pulleys, removed the fibrous lint from the projecting spikes. Although patented in 1794, the design was imitated so much by others that Whitney gained only a modest financial reward from his simple but ingenious invention.
The gin, with subsequent innovations, made the raising of short-staple cotton highly profitable and thereby revived the institution of slavery. Through the use of horse-drawn and water-powered gins, the ginning process was speeded up enormously. This permitted increased cotton production and lowered costs. As a result, cotton became the cheapest and most widely used textile fabric in the world.
With the advent of mechanical cotton pickers in the 20th century, it became necessary to refine the gin further. Among many modern improvements are devices for removing trash, drying, moisturizing, fractioning fiber, sorting, cleaning, and baling in 218-kg (480-lb) bundles. Using electric power and air-blast or suction techniques, highly automated gins handle 14 metric tons (15 U.S. tons) of cotton an hour.
Edward L. Schapsmeier
- Green, C.M., Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology (1965)
- MacMurray, R. R., Technological Change in the American Cotton Spinning Industry, 1790-1836 (1977)
- Mitchell, Broadus, Rise of Cotton Mills in the South (1921; repr. 1968)
From Amanda Carbery
The Age of History - King Cotton
By the late 1780s the textile industry had been transformed. Machines had solved most problems and could now do nearly everything, from spinning thread to presing and rolling the finshing cloth. The demand for raw cotton soared. But here was another problem. It was simple enough to grow cotton, but difficult to clean the cotton 'bolls'. Once the answer had been found, cotton went on to become the most important product in the world.
Whitney's Gin
The southern states of the USA had once grown rich on tobacco and rice and cheap slave labour. Now the land was exhausted and slavery was in decline. Cotton farms made little money because it was so hard to separate the long cotton fibres from the gren seeds. It took 20 hours of hard work to produce one kilogram of cotton.
Then, in 1793, farmer's son Eli Whitney designed his cotton gin. This was a wooden drum stuck with hooks. As it turned, the hooks pulled the cotton fibres through a mesh. The seeds would not fit through the mesh and fell outside. With this simple machine, Whitney made cotton-growing a big business. Now, a worker could clean fifty times more cotton than before.
Slavery in the South
The effect of Whitney's invention was dramatic. Vast new areas of land in the southern states were planted with cotton.
Links
- Eli Whitney article on Wikipedia.org
- Mulberry Grove Plantation, near Savannah, GA, where Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, is a "National Register site of national significance."
- Mulberry Grove Plantation Historical Marker
- Eli Whitney Museum, New Haven, CT
- Eli Whitney page
- Eli Whitney biography
- Four Eli Whitney letters
- Ancestry and descendants
- Eli Whitney
- Whitney, Eli, an Encarta Encyclopedia Article Titled "Whitney, Eli"
- Whitney, Eli
Song
They All Laughed From the MGM Picture "Shall We Dance" Music by George Gershwin; Lyric by Ira Gershwin Performed by Ginger Rogers [Verse] The odds were a hundred to one against me The world thought the heights were too high to climb But people from Missouri never incensed me Oh, I wasn't a bit concerned For from history I had learned How many, many times the world had turned [Chorus] They all laughed at Christopher Columbus When he said the world was round They all laughed when Edison recorded sound They all laughed at Wilbur and his brother When they said that man could fly They told Marconi Wireless was a phony It's the same old cry They laughed at me wanting you Said I was reaching for the moon But oh, you came through Now they'll have to change their tune They all said we never could be happy They laughed at us and how! But ho, ho, ho! Who's got the last laugh now? They all laughed at Rockefeller Center Now they're fighting to get in They all laughed at Whitney and his cotton gin They all laughed at Fulton and his steamboat Hershey and his chocolate bar Ford and his Lizzie Kept the laughers busy That's how people are They laughed at me wanting you Said it would be, "Hello, Goodbye." But oh, you came through Now they're eating humble pie They all said we'd never get together Darling, let's take a bow For ho, ho, ho! Who's got the last laugh? Hee, hee, hee! Let's at the past, laugh Ha, ha, ha! Who's got the last laugh now?
Copyright © 1999, 2006, The Whitney Research Group
