Cottonseed
This file appears in: Brazos Valley Cotton Oil Mill
Raw cottonseed is made up of three parts when it moves from the gin to the mill: linters, hulls, and kernels. Each part of the cottonseed is used in various ways after it is processed. For instance, linters are often used to produce plastics, propellants, cosmetics, and paper currency. The hulls are most used for livestock feed, and the kernels are crushed to produce cottonseed oil and meal.
This file appears in: Brazos Valley Cotton Oil Mill
Brazos Valley Cotton Oil Mill
Waco’s rapid development established it as one of the most significant urban centers of the South by the late nineteenth century. Home to one of the longest-spanning suspension bridges in the country, the once small frontier town owed a great…