A Worker In Hartsville Prints Cotton Cloth | History of SC Slide Collection

One of the final steps of textile manufacture is printing the design on the cloth. Here a worker in Hartsville prints cotton cloth during the 1930s. Works Progress Administration file photo.

Courtesy of the South Caroliniana Library.

More in this Series

History of SC Slide Collection / E. Economic Activity in South Carolina | History of SC Slide Collection / I. Textile Mills

The Graniteville Mill | History Of SC Slide Collection

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The Graniteville Mill | History Of SC Slide Collection
Episode 2
The Graniteville Mill, built by William Gregg (see William Gregg) in 1846, was one of the first cotton textile mills in the South, and laid the basis for the expansion of South Carolina's textile...
The Woodside Cotton Mill | History of SC Slide Collection

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The Woodside Cotton Mill | History of SC Slide Collection
Episode 4
The Woodside Cotton Mill in Greenville boasted in this 1913 postcard view that it was the largest complete cotton mill under one roof in America. The trolley brought mill operatives directly to the...
The Mount Vernon Mill | History of SC Slide Collection

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The Mount Vernon Mill | History of SC Slide Collection
Episode 6
The Mount Vernon Mill, also known as the Columbia Duck Mill because it manufactured heavy cotton duck cloth, is now the site for South Carolina's State Museum. It was the first electric-powered...
The Fairfield Cotton Mill | History of SC Slide Collection

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The Fairfield Cotton Mill | History of SC Slide Collection
Episode 7
The Fairfield Cotton Mill, built in 1898, expanded its operation with the construction of this new building in 1918. The original owners sold the plant to Hampton Cotton Mills of Greenville in 1912...