Online Collection |
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20th CONGRESS,
1st Session. |
[Doc. No. 158] |
HO. OF REPS
Treas. Dept. |
GROWTH AND MANUFACTURE OF SILK.
LETTER
FROM THE
SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY,
TRANSMITTING THE
Information required by a resolution of the House of Representatives, of May 11, 1826,
IN RELATION TO THE
GROWTH AND MANUFACTURE OF SILK,
ADAPTED TO THE DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE UNION.
FEBRARY 7, 1828.
Referred to the Committee on Agriculture.
WASHINGTON:
PRINTED BY GALES & SEATON.
1828.
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(c) Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, Deerfield MA. All rights reserved.
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Silk was an expensive import to the United States. To promote domestic production the government published this 220-page pamphlet. Because of the possibility of making big profits, the public was very interested. More than six thousand copies were sold in the U.S. But silk making is time-consuming and difficult, and although many tried, few were successful. In the end, hard winters (1840-42) and a mulberry tree blight (1844) killed off the domestic silk industry.
The chart shows the immense number of leaves and precise temperatures the silk worms need during their lives. These temperatures must have been hard to maintain, particularly in New England. And at the end of this item, engravings show the tools for silk manufacture.
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"Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury-Growth and Manufacture of Silk"
printer Gales and Seaton |
author Secretary of the Treasury |
date Feb 7, 1828 |
location Washington D.C. |
height 8.75" |
width 5.0" |
process/materials printed paper, ink |
item type Books/Non-fiction |
accession # #L02.060 |
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