Cotton
15
The dyes or coloring materials come from both the vegetable and the
mineral kingdom, and are obtained from nearly every part of the
world. Most of the dyes come from coal tar, which is given off when
coke is made from coal, but certain special colors are derived from
other sources. As you read this sentence, many chemists are busy
experimenting with coal-tar products and other chemicals, inventing
cheaper ways of making old colors or producing new colors that they
think people will like. In the forests of many distant regions men
are now gathering bark, roots, flowers, and berries of various plants
and trees for dyeing the cotton cloths that you will be wearing or
using after a year or so. Others are growing plants in their fields for
the same purpose.
Whatever the color of your cotton clothes may be, the greatest
probability is that the dye came from a coal mine. Before the World
War, Germany led the world in chemical industries, and her coal
mines supplied most of the world with dyestuffs. So skillfully had
German chemists worked upon coal-tar products that they were able
to produce nearly seventy thousand different tones of color.
When the United States was cut off from Germany during the
World War, our own manufacturers of dyestuffs increased their out-
put enormously and made nearly all the colors formerly imported
from Germany. The United States was in time able to supply other
countries with dyes not only for cotton, but also for woolens, linen,
paper, and leather.
How Geographical Conditions Affect Cotton Manufacturing
New England the center for cotton manufacturing in the United
States. We are now ready to consider the geographical conditions
which cause cotton manufacturing to be concentrated in certain
places. We have seen that in the United States, Fall River is the
leading center of this industry. Figure 12 shows that many of the
neighboring cities also manufacture cotton goods ; for instance, New
Bedford, Pawtucket, Lowell, Manchester, and numerous smaller
centers. In fact, New England is the leading cotton manufacturing
region of the country. Let us see why this is so.
How water power and glaciation help cotton manufacturing.
A study of Fall River will help to solve the problem. In the first place,
this city, as its name implies, is located on a river which, although
small, has numerous falls and rapids. The falls were early used for
power ; today, however, they supply only a little of the power used,
compared with that furnished by coal brought from Pennsylvania.