
“Some colored people so scared of whitefolks they claim to love the cotton gin.”
Source: The Color Purple
1850s, The Present Aspect of the Slavery Question (1859)
“Some colored people so scared of whitefolks they claim to love the cotton gin.”
Source: The Color Purple
[The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart, 10, Nelson, Willie; Pipkin, Turk, 159240197X, 2006, Gotham]
Source: Look Away!: A History of the Confederate States of America (2002), p. 21
Report on Manufactures (1791)
Context: The Cotton Mill invented in England, within the last twenty years, is a signal illustration of the general proposition, which has been just advanced. In consequence of it, all the different processes for spinning Cotton are performed by means of Machines, which are put in motion by water, and attended chiefly by women and Children; and by a smaller number of persons, in the whole, than are requisite in the ordinary mode of spinning. And it is an advantage of great moment that the operations of this mill continue with convenience, during the night, as well as through the day. The prodigious affect of such a Machine is easily conceived. To this invention is to be attributed essentially the immense progress, which has been so suddenly made in Great Britain in the various fabrics of Cotton.
Telegraph to Abraham Lincoln (December 1864), as quoted in Southern Storm: Sherman's March to the Sea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/0940450658 (2008), by Noah Andre Trudeau, New York: HarperCollins, p. 508.
1860s, 1864, Telegram to Abraham Lincoln (December 1864)
“The cotton nabobs had made the South a no-go area for the Constitution…”
2010s, Bullwhip Feudalism (2018)
Barbara K. Walker and Helen Siegl, The Art of the Turkish Tale (1990), Vol. 1, , p. 57
“I refuse to make money out of my science. My laurel is not for sale like so many bales of cotton.”
1920s, Viereck interview (1929)
Bk. III, ch. 4.
1840s, Past and Present (1843)