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  2. Warren Clay Coleman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Clay_Coleman

    Warren Clay Coleman (May 25, 1849 – May 24, 1904) was an African-American businessman in south-central North Carolina known as a founder of the Coleman Manufacturing Company, which built one of the first black-owned and operated textile mills in the United States. [1]

  3. Cannon Mills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannon_Mills

    The Cannon Mills Company was an American textile manufacturing company based in Kannapolis, North Carolina, that mainly produced towels and bed sheets. Founded in 1887 by James William Cannon , by 1914 the company was the largest towel and sheets manufacturer in the world.

  4. History of cotton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cotton

    Taxes and extra-market means again discouraged local textile production. Working conditions were brutal, especially in the Congo, Angola, and Mozambique. Several revolts occurred, and a cotton black market created a local textile industry.

  5. Shoeless Joe Jackson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoeless_Joe_Jackson

    Starting at the age of 6 or 7, Jackson worked in one of the town's textile mills as a "linthead", a derogatory name for a mill hand. [5] Family finances required Joe to take 12-hour shifts in the mill, and since education at the time was a luxury the Jackson family couldn't afford, Jackson was uneducated. [ 5 ]

  6. Coleman Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coleman_Manufacturing_Company

    The company was established in 1897 (127 years ago) () in Concord, south-central Piedmont, primarily by black capitalists in North Carolina, most based in its largest city of Wilmington. To promote the economic security of people of color, they intended to establish a cotton mill to be entirely managed and operated by blacks.

  7. Black market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_market

    A black market in Shinbashi in 1946 Illegal street traders in Barcelona in 2015. A black market, underground economy, shadow market or shadow economy is a clandestine market or series of transactions that has some aspect of illegality or is not compliant with an institutional set of rules. If the rule defines the set of goods and services whose ...

  8. United States textile workers' strike of 1934 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_textile...

    The United States textile workers' strike of 1934, colloquially known later as The Uprising of '34 [4] [2] [1] was the largest textile strike in the labor history of the United States, involving 400,000 textile workers from New England, the Mid-Atlantic states and the U.S. Southern states, lasting twenty-two days.

  9. Waltham-Lowell system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltham-Lowell_system

    Models of production and labor sources were first explored in textile manufacturing. The system used domestic labor, often referred to as mill girls, young women who came to the new textile centers from rural towns to earn more money than they could at home, and to live a cultured life in the city. Their life was very regimented: they lived in ...