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The World Cotton Centennial (also known as the World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition) was a World's Fair held in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States, in 1884. At a time when nearly one third of all cotton produced in the United States was handled in New Orleans and the city was home to the New Orleans Cotton Exchange , the idea ...
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World Cotton Centennial This page was last edited on 4 September 2022, at 02:22 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Troy Cotton & Woolen Manufactory Mill No. 2: 1860: 1960s: Troy Street: Fall River granite: located north of Mill #1; demolished in 1960s for Interstate 195 70: Union Cotton Factory: 1813: 1838: Cook Pond: field stone: 4th cotton mill in city; burned in 1838, site of Laurel Lake Mills 71: Union Mill No.3: 1877: abt. 1965: Pleasant Street: red brick
Former sugar plantation from the 1820s, manor house built in 1884 for the 1884 World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition in New Orleans. [8] 01000943 Residence Plantation House: September 8, 2001: Houma Terrebonne 79001064 Richland Plantation: March 28, 1979: Norwood: East Feliciana: 80001736 Rienzi Plantation House: May 31, 1980 ...
The 1984 Louisiana World Exposition was a world's fair held in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.It was held 100 years after the city's earlier world's fair, the World Cotton Centennial in 1884.
International Cotton Exposition (I.C.E.) was a world's fair held in Atlanta, Georgia, from October 4 to December 31 of 1881. The location was along the Western & Atlantic Railroad tracks near the present-day King Plow Arts Center development in the West Midtown area.
Edmund Richardson was born June 28, 1818, in Caswell County, North Carolina, to James Richardson and Nancy Payne Ware. [1] He was educated in common schools from the age of 10 to 14 but left school in 1832 and clerked in a dry goods store in Danville, Virginia.