
This 1823 print shows an image of Eli Whitney’s cotton gin, patented in 1794. The illustration shows the components inside that removed the seeds from cotton. As described on the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), “While an enslaved person needed about ten hours to separate the seeds from one pound of cotton fiber by hand, two people using the cotton gin could produce about fifty pounds of cotton in the same timeframe….The cotton gin made cotton tremendously profitable, which encouraged westward migration to new areas of the US South to grow more cotton. The number of enslaved people rose with the increase in cotton production, from 700,000 in 1790 to over three million by 1850.”