Long Distance Trade, Locational Dynamics and By-Product Development: Insights from the History of the American Cottonseed Industry
Abstract
:“If there is one aspect more than any other that characterizes modern commercial and industrial development… it is the utilization of substances which in a primitive stage of development of any industry were looked upon as worthless. They were secondary products incurred in the manufacture of the main commodity, for which the industrial acumen of the age found no use; or if a use were known, the prejudices and conservatism of society allowed them to languish in the shadow of a similar commodity already strongly intrenched.”Leebert Lloyd Lamborn [1] (p. 16) (1904)
“Cotton-seed oil is a most conspicuous instance of an article once thrown aside as a nuisance. Originally it was only a byproduct in the manufacture of meal from the seed; and even after it was discovered that meal could be made, it was a question what should be done with the oil. That question has been answered in various ways. What was garbage in 1860 was a fertilizer in 1870, cattle food in 1880, and table food and many things else, in 1890.”Frederic G. Mather [2] (p. 104) (1894)
1. Introduction
2. Cotton: Cultivation, Use and Environmental Issues
2.1. Domesticated Cotton Species: Advantage America
2.2. The Many (Mixed) Blessings of Tetraploidy
2.3. Physical Properties of the Cottonseed
2.4. Environmental Problems of Cottonseed Disposal
3. Cottonseed By-Product Development
3.1. Overview of the Development of the American Cottonseed Industry
the transportation business of the country, the payment of many thousands of dollars in wages, the employment of thousands of men, the annual increase in the export business of the United States, the great financial and economic value to the country of the production of cotton oil, thus giving to the consumer a sweet and wholesome product, and supplying a deficiency in the world’s shortage of olive oil and butter, the enrichment of the soil by the use of Cottonseed Meal, a by-product of the seed, the greatly increased development of the dairy and live-stock interests of the South by the use of the meal and hulls, the establishment of mattress factories by the use of the linters, and the erection of plants for the manufacture of machinery used in operating cotton oil mills.
3.2. Historical Overview of By-Product Development
3.3. Cottonseed By-Products: The Basics
3.3.1. Meal and Hulls
3.3.2. Cottonseed Oil
3.3.3. Linters
3.4. Extracting Cottonseed By-Products
3.4.1. Getting Rid of the Fuzz
3.4.2. Cottonseed Hulling
A mill built in about 1814 by planter and political leader David R. Williams of Society Hill, South Carolina, failed, because Williams tried to press oil from the whole seed as flaxseed processors did. […] Williams must have been working with seed from short-staple, or upland, cotton. […] Seed from upland cotton, even after ginning, are covered with short fibers and fuzz, which absorb too much oil. The tough, lint-covered hulls must be removed from the kernels before pressing.
The first practical cottonseed huller was designed by Francis Follett and Jabez Smith of Petersburg, Virginia. Follett patented a huller in 1829, and Smith patented an improved huller the same year. With financial backing from Follett, Smith built and marketed hullers and an improved oil press during the late 1820s and early 1830s. In an 1829 letter describing the machines, David Williams said that it had not occurred to him fifteen years earlier that the seed ‘might be hulled, like rice, so as to separate the kernels which contain all the oil’ [30] (pp. 4–5).
3.4.3. Cottonseed Oil and Meal Extraction
4. Secondary Materials and Long Distance Trade: The Case of Cottonseed
4.1. Historical Perspective on the Secondary Materials Trade
4.2. Industry Structure and the Profit Motive
- Cotton producers (both large ones who employed seasonal cotton pickers or tenant farmers and smaller independent ones)
- ◯
- produced field cotton;
- ◯
- might have historically taken a portion of cottonseed back home for planting or sold them to an intermediary, or directly to a cottonseed oil mill.
- Ginners
- ◯
- separated the fibre from the cottonseed;
- ◯
- acted as intermediaries between cotton producers and cottonseed processors.
- Cottonseed buyers (a.k.a. dealers, brokers or wholesalers)
- ◯
- traded in cottonseed.
- Crushing mill operators (a.k.a. cottonseed oil mill operators)
- ◯
- collected and stored cottonseed;
- ◯
- produced crude cottonseed oil, cake/meals, hulls, and linters.
- Refiners
- ◯
- refined the crude oil;
- ◯
- produced other by-products in the process.
- Manufacturers of cottonseed products (from livestock feed to a wide range of consumer and industrial products)
- ◯
- derived their products wholly or partly from the output of crushing mills and oil refiners.
- Wholesalers
- ◯
- distributed finished product to consumer retail outlets and/or industrial customers.
4.3. Long Distance Trade
5. Other Considerations
5.1. Political Interference
5.2. Importance of Industrial Diversity and Innovation
5.2.1. Interindustrial Borrowing in the Oil and Meal Extraction: The Case of the Migrating Expanders
5.2.2. Interdisciplinary Borrowing and Research: Low-Gossypol and Glandless Cottonseed
6. Reflective Conclusions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Lamborn, L.L. Cottonseed Products. A Manual of the Treatment of Cottonseed for its Products and their Utilization in the Arts; D. Van Nostrand Company: New York, NY, USA, 1904. [Google Scholar]
- Mather, F.G. Waste Products: Cotton-Seed Oil. Pop. Sci. Mon. 1894, 45, 104–108. [Google Scholar]
- Deutz, P. Food for Thought: Seeking the Essence of Industrial Symbiosis. In Pathways for Environmental Sustainability: Methodologies and Experiences; Salomone, R., Saija, G., Eds.; Springer: Cham, Germany, 2014; pp. 3–11. [Google Scholar]
- Clark, J.M. By-Product. In Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, Vol. III; Johnson, A.S., Seligman, E.R.A., Eds.; MacMillan: New York, NY, USA, 1930; pp. 129–130. [Google Scholar]
- Chertow, M.R. Industrial Symbiosis: Literature and Taxonomy. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. 2000, 25, 313–337. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hewes, A.K.; Lyons, D.I. The Humanistic Side of Eco-Industrial Parks: Champions and the Role of Trust. Reg. Stud. 2008, 42, 1329–1342. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ashton, W.S.; Bain, A.C. Assessing the “Short Mental Distance” in Eco-Industrial Networks. J. Ind. Ecol. 2012, 16, 70–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chertow, M.R.; Ehrenfeld, J. Organizing Self-Organizing Systems. Toward a Theory of Industrial Symbiosis. J. Ind. Ecol. 2012, 16, 13–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Walls, J.L.; Paquin, R.L. Organizational Perspectives of Industrial Symbiosis: A Review and Synthesis. Organ. Environ. 2015, 28, 32–53. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Boons, F.; Chertow, M.; Park, J.; Spekkink, W.; Shi, H. Industrial Symbiosis Dynamics and the Problem of Equivalence: Proposal for a Comparative Framework. J. Ind. Ecol. 2016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Desrochers, P. Regional Development and Inter-Industry Recycling Linkages: Some Historical Perspective. Entrep. Region. Dev. 2002, 14, 49–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Desrochers, P.; Leppälä, S. Industrial Symbiosis: Old Wine in Recycled Bottles? Some Perspective from the History of Economic and Geographical Thought. Int. Reg. Sci. Rev. 2010, 33, 338–361. [Google Scholar]
- Simmonds, P.L. Waste Products and Undeveloped Substances: A Synopsis of Progress Made in Their Economic Utilisation During the Last Quarter of a Century at Home and Abroad; Hardwicke and Bogue: London, UK, 1876. [Google Scholar]
- Lipsett, C.H. The Fabulous Wall Street Scrap Giants; The Atlas Publishing Co., Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1969. [Google Scholar]
- Lipsett, C.H. A Hundred Years of Recycling History as Described by Charles H. Lipsett: From Yankee Tincart Peddlers to Wall Street Scrap Giants; The Atlas Publishing Co., Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1974. [Google Scholar]
- The American Metal Market (AMM). AMM: The First 100 Years. Available online: http://www.amm.com/History.html (accessed on 28 November 2016).
- Lipsett, C.H. Industrial Wastes and Salvage: Conservation and Utilization; The Atlas Publishing Co., Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1963/1951. [Google Scholar]
- Desrochers, P. How did the Invisible Hand Handle Industrial Waste? By-product Development before the Modern Environmental Era. Enterp. Soc. 2007, 8, 348–374. [Google Scholar]
- Lyons, D. Integrating Waste, Manufacturing and Industrial Symbiosis: An Analysis of Recycling, Remanufacturing and Waste Treatment Firms in Texas. Local Environ. 2005, 10, 71–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lyons, D.; Rice, M.; Wachal, R. Circuits of Scrap: Closed Loop Industrial Ecosystems and the Geography of U.S International Recyclable Material Flows 1995–2005. Geogr. J. 2009, 175, 286–300. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Maher, J.W. Retrieving the Obsolete: Formation of the American Scrap Steel Industry, 1870–1933. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA, 1999. [Google Scholar]
- Zimring, C.A. Cash for Your Trash: Scrap Recycling in America; Rutgers University Press: New Brunswick, NJ, USA, 2005. [Google Scholar]
- Jensen, P.D. The Role of Geospatial Industrial Diversity in the Facilitation of Regional Industrial Symbiosis. Resour. Conserv. Recycl. 2016, 107, 92–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Maiti, R.; Satya, P.; Rajkumar, D.; Ramaswamy, A. Fibre crops. In Crop Plant Anatomy; CABI Publishing: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2012; pp. 156–205. [Google Scholar]
- Brubaker, C.L.; Bourland, F.M.; Wendel, J.F. The origin and domestication of cotton. In Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production; Smith, C.W., Cothren, J.T., Eds.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1999; pp. 3–32. [Google Scholar]
- Hancock, J.F. Fruits, vegetables, oils and fibres. In Plant Evolution and the Origin of Crop Species, 2nd ed.; CABI Publishing: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2004; pp. 226–245. [Google Scholar]
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. List of Plants in the Family Malvaceae. Available online: https://www.britannica.com/topic/list-of-plants-in-the-family-Malvaceae-2040580 (accessed on 27 November 2016).
- Roche, J. History and Background of Cotton. In The International Cotton Trade; Woodhead Publishing Ltd.: Cambridge, UK, 1994; pp. 1–23. [Google Scholar]
- Wendel, J.F.; Brubaker, C.L.; Percival, A.E. Genetic Diversity in Gossypium hirsutum and the Origin of Upland Cotton. Am. J. Bot. 1992, 79, 1291–1310. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wrenn, L.B. Beginnings of the American Cottonseed Industry. In Cinderella of the New South: A History of the Cottonseed Industry, 1855–1955; The University of Tennessee Press: Knoxville, TN, USA, 1995; pp. 1–9. [Google Scholar]
- Niemiec, C. Cottonseed: The “Golden Goose”. Oils & Fats Intl, (Oct/Nov) 2013. Available online: http://www.ofimagazine.com/content-images/backgrounders/Cottonseed.pdf (accessed on 30 November 2016).
- Hancock, J.F. Polyploidy and gene duplication. In Plant Evolution and the Origin of Crop Species, 2nd ed.; CABI Publishing: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2004; pp. 77–99. [Google Scholar]
- Yafa, S. Introduction. In Big Cotton: How a Humble Fibre Created Fortunes, Wrecked Civilizations, and Put America on the Map; Viking: New York, NY, USA, 2005; pp. 1–8. [Google Scholar]
- Jahagirdar, C.J.; Kaushik, N.H.; Khadi, B.M.; Maralappannavar, M.S. The Application of a Portable Spectrophotometer to On-Farm Studies of Naturally Coloured Cotton Genotypes. J. Text. Inst. 2002, 93, 297–305. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Oosterhuis, D.M.; Jernstedt, J. Morphology and Anatomy of the Cotton Plant. In Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production; Smith, C.W., Cothren, J.T., Eds.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1999; pp. 175–206. [Google Scholar]
- Hopper, N.W.; McDaniel, R.G. The Cotton Seed. In Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production; Smith, C.W., Cothren, J.T., Eds.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1999; pp. 289–317. [Google Scholar]
- Gregory, S.R.; Hernandez, E.; Savoy, B.R. Cottonseed Processing. In Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production; Smith, C.W., Cothren, J.T., Eds.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1999; pp. 793–893. [Google Scholar]
- Wrenn, L.B. Introduction. In Cinderella of the New South: A History of the Cottonseed Industry, 1855–1955; University of Knoxville Press: Knoxville, TN, USA, 1995; pp. 14–23. [Google Scholar]
- May, O.L.; Lege, K.E. Development of the World Cotton Industry. In Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production; Smith, C.W., Cothren, J.T., Eds.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1999; pp. 65–97. [Google Scholar]
- Rodman, J. NMSU Glandless Cotton Research Appears Promising. Available online: http://newscenter.nmsu.edu/Articles/view/7995 (accessed on 28 November 2016).
- Blasi, D.A.; Drouillard, J. Composition and Feeding Value of Cottonseed Feed Products for Beef Cattle. Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service MF-2538. 2002. Available online: https://www.bookstore.ksre.ksu.edu/pubs/MF2538.pdf (accessed on 30 November 2016).
- Sunilkumar, G.; Campbell, L.M.; Puckhaber, L.; Stipanovic, R.D.; Rathore, K.S. Engineering cottonseed for use in human nutrition by tissue-specific reduction of toxic gossypol. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2006, 103, 18054–18059. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Gadelha, I.C.N.; Fonseca, N.B.S.; Oloris, S.C.S.; Melo, M.M.; Soto-Blanco, B. Gossypol Toxicity from Cottonseed Products. Sci. World J. 2014, 2014, 231635. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Lewton, F.L. The Cotton of the Hopi Indians: A New Species of Gossypium. Smithsonian Misc. Coll. 1912, 60, 1–21. [Google Scholar]
- Fulton, H.J. Hopi Cotton: A Variable Species. J. Agric. Res. 1938, 56, 333–336. [Google Scholar]
- Taylor, A. Gossypium hopi: Product Value for Consumers through Heritage, History and Culture; The Eagle Feather, University of North Texas: Denton, TX, USA, 2014. Available online: http://eaglefeather.honors.unt.edu/2014/article/311#.WEhHLpL6xSw (accessed on 6 December 2016).
- Brooks, E.C. The Story of Cotton and the Development of the Cotton States; Rand: Chicago, IL, USA, 1911. [Google Scholar]
- Ransom, L.A. The Great Cottonseed Industry of the South; Oil, Paint and Drug Reporter: New York, NY, USA, 1911. [Google Scholar]
- Sharkey, W.L.; Boyd, S.S.; Ellett, H.T.; Harris, W.L. The Revised Code of the Statute Laws of the State of Mississippi; E. Barksdale, State Printer: Jackson, MS, USA, 1857. [Google Scholar]
- Ogden, H.V. Paper on Cotton-Seed Oil and Cotton-Seed Oil Mills; Constitution Print: Atlanta, GA, USA, 1880. [Google Scholar]
- Deasy, G.F. Geography of the United States Cottonseed Oil Industry. Econ. Geogr. 1941, 17, 345–352. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nixon, H.C. The Rise of the American Cottonseed Oil Industry. J. Political Econ. 1930, 38, 73–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carlson, A.S. Economic Geography of Industrial Materials; Reinhold Publishing Corporation: New York, NY, USA, 1956. [Google Scholar]
- Brooks, C.P. Cotton: Its Uses, Varieties, Fibre Structure, Cultivation, and Preparation for the Market and as an Article of Commerce, also the Manufacture of Cotton Seed Oil, Cotton Seed Meal and Fertilizers, with Especial Reference to Cotton Growing, Ginning, and Oil Pressing in the United States; Spon & Chamberlain: New York, NY, USA, 1898. [Google Scholar]
- Grimshaw, R. Industrial Applications of Cottonseed Oil. J. Franklin Inst. 1889, 127, 191–203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Keller, A.G.; Bishop, A.L. Commercial and Industrial Geography; Ginn and Company: Boston, MA, USA, 1928. [Google Scholar]
- Wrenn, L.B. World War I and Postwar Shocks. In Cinderella of the New South: A History of the Cottonseed Industry, 1855–1955; University of Knoxville Press: Knoxville, TN, USA, 1995; pp. 120–137. [Google Scholar]
- National Cottonseed Products Association. Facts about a Great Exclusively Southern Industry; National Cottonseed Products Association: Memphis, TN, USA, 1930; p. 6. [Google Scholar]
- Baffes, J. Markets for Cotton By-Products. Global Trends and Implications for African Cotton Producers. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 5355. 2010. Available online: http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/102651468016157422/pdf/WPS5355.pdf (accessed on 3 December 2016).
- National Cottonseed Products Association (NCPA). Products. Available online: http://www.cottonseed.com/products/ (accessed on 26 November 2016).
- National Cottonseed Products Association (NCPA). Rules of the National Cottonseed Products Association, Inc. 2013. Available online: http://www.cottonseed.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/2013-14-Trading-Rules-edited-for-web-site.pdf (accessed on 25 November 2016).
- Smith, R.; Ogden Phillips, J.M.; Smith, T.R. Industrial and Commercial Geography, 4th ed.; Henry Holt and Company: New York, NY, USA, 1961. [Google Scholar]
- Landon, C.E. Industrial Geography; Prentice-Hall: New York, NY, USA, 1939. [Google Scholar]
- Butler, N. Benne Seeds in the Lowcountry. Charleston Time Machine: Charleston Public Library, 2015. Available online: https://charlestontimemachine.org/2015/04/24/benne-seeds-in-the-lowcountry/ (accessed on 4 December 2016).
- Computer Transition Services, Inc. PYCO Cottonseed: The Inside Story. Available online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9V3_RiU8Nas (accessed online on 3 December 2016).
- Mullendore, W.C. History of the United States Food Administration 1917–1919; Stanford University Press: Palo Alto, CA, USA, 1941. [Google Scholar]
- Jenkins, E.H. The Trade in Cotton Seed Meal; Bulletin 170; Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station: New Haven, CT, USA, 1912.
- US Code of Federal Regulation. Subpart B—Standards for Grades of Cottonseed Sold or Offered for Sale for Crushing Purposes Within the United States. § 61.103 Determination of Quality Index; US Government Publishing Office: Washington, DC, USA, 2016. Available online: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2016-title7-vol3/pdf/CFR-2016-title7-vol3-sec61-101.pdf (accessed on 3 December 2016).
- Walsh, G.E. The Value of By-Products. Gunton’s Mag. 1902, 22, 456–461. [Google Scholar]
- Brandt, K. The Reconstruction of World Agriculture; W.W. Norton & Company Inc.: New York, NY, USA, 1945. [Google Scholar]
- Henriksen, I. An Economic History of Denmark. EH.Net Encyclopedia. Whaples, R., Ed.; 2006. Available online: http://eh.net/encyclopedia/article/henriksen.denmark (accessed on 2 December 2016).
- Kelly, V.; Perakis, S.; Diallo, B.; Dembéle, N.N. Cottonseed, Oil, and Cake: Co-Products or By-Products in the C-4 Cotton Sectors? United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and West African Cotton Improvement Program (WACIP). 2010. Available online: http://fsg.afre.msu.edu/cotton/English_Cottonseed_April2011.pdf (accessed on 4 December 2016).
- United States Department of Agriculture: National Agricultural Statistics Service. Broilers: Inventory by State, US. Broiler Production by State, Million Head. 2015. Available online: https://www.nass.usda.gov/Charts_and_Maps/Poultry/brlmap.php (accessed on 4 December 2016).
- Cook, R. Cattle Inventory: Ranking of all 50 States. Drovers: Driving the Beef Market. 2015. Available online: http://www.cattlenetwork.com/advice-and-tips/cowcalf-producer/cattle-inventory-ranking-all-50-states (accessed on 4 December 2016).
- Statista: The Statistics Portal. Top Dairy Producing States in the U.S. Based on Number of Milk Cows from 2014 to 2016 (in 1000 s). Available online: https://www.statista.com/statistics/194962/top-10-us-states-by-number-of-milk-cows/ (accessed on 4 December 2016).
- Boyle, J.E. Cottonseed Oil Exchanges. Ann. Am. Acad. Political Soc. Sci. 1931, 155, 167–172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Korhonen, J. Theory of industrial ecology: The case of the concept of diversity. Progr. Ind. Ecol. 2005, 2, 35–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Deutz, P.; Ioppolo, G. From Theory to Practice: Enhancing the Potential Policy Impact of Industrial Ecology. Sustainability 2015, 7, 2259–2273. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- The Plant List (Version 1.1): A Working List of All Plant Species. Gossypium hopi Lewton. Available online: http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-2831119 (accessed on 29 November 2016).
- Cappelletti, G.M.; Ioppolo, G.; Nicoletti, G.M.; Russo, C. Energy Requirement of Extra Virgin Olive Oil Production. Sustainability 2014, 6, 4966–4974. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Desrochers, P.; Szurmak, J. Long Distance Trade, Locational Dynamics and By-Product Development: Insights from the History of the American Cottonseed Industry. Sustainability 2017, 9, 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9040579
Desrochers P, Szurmak J. Long Distance Trade, Locational Dynamics and By-Product Development: Insights from the History of the American Cottonseed Industry. Sustainability. 2017; 9(4):579. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9040579
Chicago/Turabian StyleDesrochers, Pierre, and Joanna Szurmak. 2017. "Long Distance Trade, Locational Dynamics and By-Product Development: Insights from the History of the American Cottonseed Industry" Sustainability 9, no. 4: 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9040579
APA StyleDesrochers, P., & Szurmak, J. (2017). Long Distance Trade, Locational Dynamics and By-Product Development: Insights from the History of the American Cottonseed Industry. Sustainability, 9(4), 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9040579