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Eli Whitney II

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Eli Whitney II Famous memorial

Birth
Westborough, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
8 Jan 1825 (aged 59)
New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA
Burial
New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.313357, Longitude: -72.927781
Plot
22 Cedar Ave., East
Memorial ID
View Source
Inventor. He was born on a farm in Westborough, Massachusetts, spending most of his young life in his father's tool shop. He repaired tools and constructed many everyday useful implements. His mother died when he was eleven. At age twelve, he displayed a look into his future. What made his father's silver watch tick? He promptly opened the watch while removing all the parts. The thought of an angry father compelled him to reassemble the device. The watch continued to keep perfect time. During the Revolutionary War, the British blockade made many staples unavailable to the colonies. However; enterprising fifteen year old Eli found a way to forge nails in his father's workshop and had a going business selling them to builders. Unable to attend college because of lack of money, the youngster obtained a teaching position while attending Leicester Academy to hone his academic skills. Four years later he enrolled at Yale. Upon graduation, he was engaged as a tutor for the children of Mrs. Nathanael Greene, the widow of the famous Revolutionary general. While at her plantation 'Mulberry Grove' in Georgia, he heard Southern cotton growers were in a quandary over the separation of seeds from the lint. He studied the cotton plant carefully and began to work on a machine and six months later the finished product was the cotton gin. The invention was able to clean a thousand pounds a day. It had taken a slave all day to clean one pound by hand. The device was not only an economic bonanza for the South but also the North which had the mills for making cotton into cloth. Whitney with a partner opened a factory in Hamden, Connecticut, an endeavor to manufacture the gin in an attempt to cash in on the device. The company was soon in jeopardy with production problems and then the building was destroyed including their stock of gins. However, within seven months they were again in business but more problems plagued the operation causing them to get out of the gin business and start making muskets for the U.S. government. Whitney had perfected a way to manufacture them by machine so that the parts were interchangeable. A deal was struck to supply the government with 10,000 musket kits. He not only became wealthy but the country's foremost arms supplier. He married late in life, at the age of 51, he took young Henrietta Edwards as his bride and the union produced four children including one son Eli Whitney Jr. who also became a famous innovator and inventor. His health began to fail due to an enlarged prostate. His inventiveness led to self designing a device that helped relieve the pain but he finally succumbed to the disease at age 56 at his residence in New Haven. Postscript: Whitney could not have foreseen the ways in which the cotton gin would change society. The growth of slavery increased. Cotton became so profitable it greatly increased the demand for slave labor. Today at Mulberry Grove, Port Wentworth, Ga., the foundation still stands on which the first cotton gin was erected. A State Historical Marker has been erected at the nearby city hall in Port Wentworth proudly proclaiming the area as the birthplace of the gin. However most of the legacy is located at Hamden, Connecticut. The New Haven Historical Society has preserved what is left of the Whitney factory complex which was located on the Mill River using it as the power for running machinery. Whitney constructed a low dam and waterwheels that made possible the Whitney Armory and its adjacent small settlement of Whitneyville where the employees lived. Eli Whitney developed the manufacturing village for 25 years until his death. Some eighteen buildings in the complex have been destroyed. The centerpiece of the settlement was the barn and the small farm. It supplied the boarding house kitchen and provided shelter for the draft animals used at the Armory. Today the site in Hamden is maintained by the New Haven Historical Society. It contains the Eli Whitney Museum and the preserved Whitney Barn, The unmarried Workers Boarding House and the Fuel Shed. It contains a trove of artifacts which continues to grow from continuing archeological digs. The Eli Whitney Technical High School is nearby where students can learn the skills of a trade as well as academics.
Inventor. He was born on a farm in Westborough, Massachusetts, spending most of his young life in his father's tool shop. He repaired tools and constructed many everyday useful implements. His mother died when he was eleven. At age twelve, he displayed a look into his future. What made his father's silver watch tick? He promptly opened the watch while removing all the parts. The thought of an angry father compelled him to reassemble the device. The watch continued to keep perfect time. During the Revolutionary War, the British blockade made many staples unavailable to the colonies. However; enterprising fifteen year old Eli found a way to forge nails in his father's workshop and had a going business selling them to builders. Unable to attend college because of lack of money, the youngster obtained a teaching position while attending Leicester Academy to hone his academic skills. Four years later he enrolled at Yale. Upon graduation, he was engaged as a tutor for the children of Mrs. Nathanael Greene, the widow of the famous Revolutionary general. While at her plantation 'Mulberry Grove' in Georgia, he heard Southern cotton growers were in a quandary over the separation of seeds from the lint. He studied the cotton plant carefully and began to work on a machine and six months later the finished product was the cotton gin. The invention was able to clean a thousand pounds a day. It had taken a slave all day to clean one pound by hand. The device was not only an economic bonanza for the South but also the North which had the mills for making cotton into cloth. Whitney with a partner opened a factory in Hamden, Connecticut, an endeavor to manufacture the gin in an attempt to cash in on the device. The company was soon in jeopardy with production problems and then the building was destroyed including their stock of gins. However, within seven months they were again in business but more problems plagued the operation causing them to get out of the gin business and start making muskets for the U.S. government. Whitney had perfected a way to manufacture them by machine so that the parts were interchangeable. A deal was struck to supply the government with 10,000 musket kits. He not only became wealthy but the country's foremost arms supplier. He married late in life, at the age of 51, he took young Henrietta Edwards as his bride and the union produced four children including one son Eli Whitney Jr. who also became a famous innovator and inventor. His health began to fail due to an enlarged prostate. His inventiveness led to self designing a device that helped relieve the pain but he finally succumbed to the disease at age 56 at his residence in New Haven. Postscript: Whitney could not have foreseen the ways in which the cotton gin would change society. The growth of slavery increased. Cotton became so profitable it greatly increased the demand for slave labor. Today at Mulberry Grove, Port Wentworth, Ga., the foundation still stands on which the first cotton gin was erected. A State Historical Marker has been erected at the nearby city hall in Port Wentworth proudly proclaiming the area as the birthplace of the gin. However most of the legacy is located at Hamden, Connecticut. The New Haven Historical Society has preserved what is left of the Whitney factory complex which was located on the Mill River using it as the power for running machinery. Whitney constructed a low dam and waterwheels that made possible the Whitney Armory and its adjacent small settlement of Whitneyville where the employees lived. Eli Whitney developed the manufacturing village for 25 years until his death. Some eighteen buildings in the complex have been destroyed. The centerpiece of the settlement was the barn and the small farm. It supplied the boarding house kitchen and provided shelter for the draft animals used at the Armory. Today the site in Hamden is maintained by the New Haven Historical Society. It contains the Eli Whitney Museum and the preserved Whitney Barn, The unmarried Workers Boarding House and the Fuel Shed. It contains a trove of artifacts which continues to grow from continuing archeological digs. The Eli Whitney Technical High School is nearby where students can learn the skills of a trade as well as academics.

Bio by: Donald Greyfield


Inscription

North side: "The inventor of the Cotton Gin. Of useful science & arts the efficient patron & improver."
South side: "In the social relations of life a model of excellence. While private affection weeps at his tomb, his country honors his memory."



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1099/eli-whitney: accessed ), memorial page for Eli Whitney II (8 Dec 1765–8 Jan 1825), Find a Grave Memorial ID 1099, citing Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.