"Machinery Has Completely Taken over": The Diffusion of the Mechanical Cotton Picker, 1949-1964

Hand picking of cotton in the United States virtually disappeared twenty years after the first mechanical harvester was marketed in 1949. Contrary to received accounts, southern social institutions did not impede the diffusion of the mechanical cotton picker from the West to the cotton belt in the S...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of interdisciplinary history 2008-07, Vol.39 (1), p.65-96
Hauptverfasser: Heinicke, Craig, Grove, Wayne A.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hand picking of cotton in the United States virtually disappeared twenty years after the first mechanical harvester was marketed in 1949. Contrary to received accounts, southern social institutions did not impede the diffusion of the mechanical cotton picker from the West to the cotton belt in the South so much as environmental factors and educational attainment did. Rising cotton yields and exogenous technological change drove diffusion by reducing the costs of machine harvesting. Labor displacement resulting from the cotton picker occurred only in a concentrated burst after 1959.
ISSN:0022-1953
1530-9169
DOI:10.1162/jinh.2008.39.1.65