By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- An 1880s and a 1920s cotton gin are the latest
additions to agricultural engineering classes at Mississippi
State University. Joe Jim
Hogan of Oxford donated the cotton gin stands to MSU's
Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering in
May. Both cotton gins were steam-powered. The older one
could gin four to six bales of cotton a day, the newer one
could gin eight in a day. "I
thought maybe the university could use it in some way to
show people how the old gins were made," Hogan
said. Both
cotton gins came to the university with a hopper to load the
cotton, feeders to take it into the machine, a lint
condenser for the newer gin, a seed cotton fan and various
other parts necessary to gin cotton. Hogan's
father installed the gins in 1905 and then the 1920s. The
early gin replaced a horse-powered cotton gin his father
built in the mid 1890s. "My dad
couldn't get enough production from the horse-powered gin,
so he went to steam," Hogan said. The
older gin, built in Atlanta by the E. Van Winkle Gin Company
and Machine Works, is believed to be very rare. The newer
gin was made by the Continental Gin Co. Herb
Willcutt, agricultural engineer with MSU's Extension
Service, said the university intends to get the newer gin
into operating condition. "Both
gins are in very good condition considering their age,"
Willcutt said. "These cotton gin stands are very useful to
compare cotton gins of the present to yesterday. They are
extremely valuable as a teaching tool and piece of
history." The
1920s gin will be reconditioned soon and operators will try
to gin cotton with it. Once working, it will be displayed in
various demonstrations. The older one will require new parts
before it can operate. The gins
will become part of the Gin Technology emphasis area of the
Agricultural Engineering Technology and Business program
within MSU's Department of Agricultural and Biological
Engineering. "They
should be considered as museum pieces," Willcutt said. "They
will be displayed in teaching to show the contrast and
similarity in technology of the late 1800s to present day
cotton ginning." The
newer gin will be on permanent display in the Pace Seed Lab
where it can be operated occasionally. Along with it will be
a small, state-of-the-art laboratory gin for teaching and
ginning samples. The older model will be housed in the
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Building, where it
will eventually be restored and may be used as a traveling
display in other areas where cotton is ginned, Willcutt
said. Released:
June 29, 1998
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Donated Cotton
Gins To Enrich Ag Classes
Contact: Herb Willcutt, (601) 325-7345
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:51
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an98/980629hw.htm
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