It was first cultivated by Josiah Tattnall and Nicholas Turnbull, on Skidaway island, near Savannah ; and subsequently by James Spaulding and Alexander Bisset, on St. Simon's island, at the mouth of the Altamaha, and on Jekyl island by Richard Leake.... Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents - 102. lappuseautors: United States. Patent Office - 1853Pilnskats - Par šo grāmatu
| edmund ruffin - 1835 - 912 lapas
...and surrounded by the salt water of the sea. Gradually, however, the cotton culture was extended into lower grounds, and beyond the limits of the islands...mixture of clay, and lastly into coarse clays, deposited by the great rivers where they met the tides of the sea. In all these soils the cotton plant grows... | |
| United States. Census Office. 7th census, 1850 - 1853 - 174 lapas
...then known in the West Indies as the "Anguilla cotton." It was first cultivated by Josiah Tattnall and Nicholas Turnbull, on Skidaway island, near Savannah...1794 — the year after the invention of Whitney's saw gin 6 65 — the annual amount of cotton produced in North America was comparatively inconsiderable... | |
| United States. Congress. House - 1854 - 500 lapas
...then known in the West Indies as the "Anguilla cotton." It was first cultivated by Josiah Tattnall and Nicholas Turnbull, on Skidaway island, near Savannah...inconsiderable; but since that period, there is probably nothing recorded in the history of industry, including its manufactures in this country and Europe,... | |
| Joseph Addison Turner - 1857 - 340 lapas
...then known in the West Indies as the " Anguilla cotton." It was first cultivated by Josiah Tatnall and Nicholas Turnbull, on Skidaway Island, near Savannah...inconsiderable ; but since that period, there is probably nothing recorded in the history of industry, including its manufactures in this country and Europe,... | |
| Joseph Addison Turner - 1857 - 332 lapas
...then known in the West Indies as the " Anguilla cotton." It was first cultivated by Josiah Tatnall and Nicholas Turnbull, on Skidaway Island, near Savannah;...rivers, where they meet the ocean tides. Previous to 1794—the year after the invention of Whitney's saw-gin—the annual amount of cotton produced in... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate - 690 lapas
...atmosphere, and surrounded by the sea. Gradually, however, the cotton culture was extended to the lo\ver grounds, and beyond the limits of the islands to the...rivers, where they meet the ocean tides. Previous to 1794@the year alter the invention of Whitney's saw-gin 31 639 反 D ㏄ ・ 几 器 : coast i degre... | |
| United States. Congress. House - 660 lapas
...however, the cotton culture was extended to the lower grounds, and beyond the limits of the islands to th^ adjacent shores of the continent, into soils containing...the great rivers, where they meet the ocean tides. — the annual amount of cotton produced in North America was comparatively inconsiderable ; but since... | |
| United States. Patent Office - 1853 - 474 lapas
...by Richard Leake. For many years after its introduction, it was confined to the more elevated pnrts of these islands, bathed by the saline atmosphere,...inconsiderable ; but since that period, there is probably nothing recorded in the history of industry, including its manufactures in this country and Europe,... | |
| Commissioner of Agriculture For the West Indies - 1919 - 496 lapas
...limits of the islands to the adjacent shores of the continent, into soils containing a mixture ' f clay ; and lastly into coarse clays deposited along...the great rivers, where they meet the ocean tides.' In section V—Statistics of Cotton—in tracing the history .of cotton from 1730 to 1836, the following... | |
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