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Eli
Whitney was the inventor of the cotton gin and a pioneer in
the mass production of cotton. Whitney was born in Westboro,
Massachusetts on December 8, 1765 and died on January 8,
1825. He graduated from Yale College in 1792. By April 1793,
Whitney had designed and constructed the cotton gin, a
machine that automated the separation of cottonseed from the
short-staple cotton fiber. Eli Whitney's invention of the
cotton gin revolutionized the cotton industry in the United
States. Prior to his invention, farming cotton required
hundreds of man-hours to separate the cottonseed from the
raw cotton fibers. Simple seed-removing devices have been
around for centuries, however, Eli Whitney's invention
automated the seed separation process. His machine could
generate up to fifty pounds of cleaned cotton daily, making
cotton production profitable for the southern states. *posted
November 13-November 18, 2005 |
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