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OverviewThe South didn't just lose its mills. It lost the economies, communities, and civic worlds built around them-by design. From the tobacco warehouses of Winston-Salem to the cotton mills of Gaston County, from the plantation commissaries of Southside Virginia to the cigar factories of Ybor City, The Cotton Belt follows industrial capital as it moved through the American South-and what it left behind when the calculation changed. This is not a book about ruins. It is a book about decisions. Across 100 entries, author Cole Morrow documents the specific people, budgets, and reasoning behind the rise and abandonment of the Cotton Belt's industrial landscape: the mill owners who built company towns with no municipal government; the tobacco corporations that depended on Black labor while concentrating ownership elsewhere; the furniture manufacturers who moved production to China after NAFTA; the paper mills that polluted rivers for a century and left cleanup costs to the public. Each site is examined not as decay but as evidence-of who benefited, who paid, and who was asked to call the result progress. 100 places. 6 industries. One repeating calculation: build where labor is cheap, stay while the margin works, leave when it doesn't. Industries covered include: Cotton mills - Cannon, Cone, Dan River, Burlington, Springs, WestPoint Stevens Tobacco - R.J. Reynolds, American Tobacco, Liggett & Myers, Philip Morris, auction warehouses Company towns - Kannapolis, Delta and Pine Land, Dockery Farms, Pelzer, Cramerton, Honea Path Furniture and paper - High Point, Thomasville, Henredon, Champion, International Paper Communities left behind - Greenwood, Helena, Dalton, Danville, Spartanburg, Burlington Civic ruins - American Tobacco Historic District, Loray Mill, Duke Hospital, Wachovia The Cotton Belt made sheets, towels, cigarettes, furniture, and medical endowments. It also made workers dependent on industries whose owners could leave-and did. The Cotton Belt follows what remains after capital finishes with a place: the buildings, the absences, the schools, the rivers, and the people whose skills were made valuable by one economy and discarded by the next. Essential reading for anyone interested in American economic history, Southern history, labor history, deindustrialization, race and class in the South, or the real story behind the places the New South left behind. Book 2 of the Abandoned America series. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cole MorrowPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9798199318044Pages: 338 Publication Date: 30 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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