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View from across the mill pond with White Oak Cotton Mill in the background and the mill village in the foreground.
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Men load cotton into opening machines that loosen the fibers, work out lumps, and remove larger impurities.
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Men work at the lapper machines, which remove impurities from the cotton and wind it into rolls of cotton batting.
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Men work in the card room to comb out the fibers which are then gathered together to form a rope called card sliver.
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Men work at the drawing frames where the spun yarn is doubled and drawn out multiple times in order to produce a uniform weight.
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Two men stand behind the slubber machines which draw out the fibers into a finer strand of cotton and gives it a twist.
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The speeders unwind the fibers from the slubbers and draw them out multiple times until a finer strand of cotton is formed.
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Women work at spinning frames that twist the fibers firmly together to make yarn that is ready to be dyed.
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