Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts [serial] 14, 2 (1988)

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." (R.
A. Brock, editor. The Official Records of Robert Dinwiddie, vol. 1, Richmond, Va: Virginia Historical Society, 1883, p. 385). This important trade in English woolens was disrupted just prior to and during the Revolution, but quickly resumed shortly thereafter. In 1822, James Butterworth described the trade in Welsh and Kendal cottons from Britain, adding that they "are used chiefly for Negro clothing in America, and the West Indies. ..." (Florence Mont- gomery, Textiles in America 1650-1
...870, New York: W. W. Norton, 1984, p.
206.) During the late eighteenth into the nineteenth centuries, the cotton plant gained greater importance in the southern economy, and some plantations could grow enough cotton to make shirts and shifts for slaves or to weave mixed wool and cotton fabrics for slaves' use.
Crocus: A coarse linen fabric used for slave's trousers.
Drawers: Men's pants. Although the term usually was used to indicate a man's undergarment, it occasionally was used to refer to an outer garm.ent.


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