I had this on my test just the other day :) William Gregg
North Carolina and South Carolina.
The largest concentrations of facilities in this industry were in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. About two-thirds of the establishments in this category had fewer than 20 employees.
There are textile factories located in both the southern and northern parts of Philadelphia. The majority of textile factories tend to be located in the northern part of Philadelphia.
Holokauszt túlélő.
The address of the Greenville Textile Heritage Society is: Po Box 4355, Greenville, SC 29608-4355
Most of the people whose deaths were due to byssinosis lived in the textile-producing regions of North and South Carolina.
The states producing the most products in this industry were Georgia, Kentucky, South Carolina, California, Tennessee, Texas, and North Carolina.
There's one in Everett, WA and Charleston, South Carolina.
By the early 20th century, most of the US textile industries had moved to the south. North Carolina alone had 177 mills in 1900. Previous to this, most of the textile industries were located in the northeast.
hogs, tabacco, cattle, poultry, dairy, tourism, machinary, paper products, chemical products, and textile goods
Industrial growth in South Carolina during the Reconstruction period was driven by investments in textile manufacturing, increased demand for goods in the post-Civil War era, and the availability of cheap labor due to the abolition of slavery. The state's abundant water resources also played a role in the expansion of industries like textile mills.