Michigan's Timber History
The
earliest lumbering was done by the French in order to build forts,
fur-trading, posts, and missions. The British, and later the Americans,
used Michigan’s hardwoods to build merchant and war ships.
North of an imaginary line from Muskegon and Saginaw, the pines
grew: white, jack and Norway, as well as other conifers. It was
the white pine that allowed the heyday of the lumber industry. Many
white pines were over 200 years old, two hundred feet in height
and five feet in diameter.
Michigan’s pine became important as the supply of trees in the northeast
was being used up. By 1880 Michigan was producing as much lumber as the
next three states combined.
The first area where many mills were built was Saginaw. Six rivers
converge to form the Saginaw River which empties into Saginaw Bay
and then Lake Huron. The rivers are the Chippewa, Tittabawassee,
Cass, Bad, Shiawassee, and Flint. Rivers played a very important
part for the loggers because the lumber had to be floated to the
mills and then to market.
The first group of people to set up lumbering operations were from
New England, especially Maine and New York. The forests there were
almost entirely cut, so the owners and experienced crews followed
the work. Many felt that the huge forests of Michigan would last
for many, many years, yet within the 20 year period of 1870 to 1890,
most of the trees were cut.
The first people to understand
the immensity of the woods were the government surveyors, but their
job was to get information about the topography. The timber cruisers
worked for the lumbermen and would select the best land available
and reserve it at the land office for their employers. Much of this
land sold for as little as $1.25 an acre and later, under the Homestead
Act (1862), men were hired to claim a plot of 160 acres and stay
until the timber on it was cut.
After the timber cruisers found the best stands of pine, the crew
would come in and build a camp which consisted of a bunkhouse and cook shanty which had a dining room and kitchen–the most important
part of camp. There was a blacksmith and a carpenter as well as
a granary and barn for the animals. The camp store would have the
basic supplies needed by the men, such as clothes and tobacco. These
buildings were not very well built, as they were often meant to
be temporary; to be moved when the trees were gone. Each camp typically
had two foremen, about seventy men, twenty teams of horses, and seven
yoke of oxen. The men came to the camp in late fall or early winter as logging was a cold weather job. The food was plentiful and plain; usual a meal would be bread, potatoes, tea, beans, and pork. The
crews worked from about 4 a.m. until dusk normally eating the noon
meal in the woods. The horses and oxen, on the other hand, were
very well treated and rarely overworked.
The logs were far too big and
heavy to take from the woods by dragging, so the loggers made ice-covered
roads, where the logs could be pulled on sleds. The loads were often
extremely big and contests were held between rival camps to see
which could stack a load the highest. The logs were taken to the
banks of rivers, where they were piled twenty to thirty feet high,
awaiting the spring thaw. When rivers melted, the logs were pushed
into the swollen rivers and floated to the mills. At the mills,
the logs were sorted in the boom area each identified by a log
mark on the end of the logs. They were then sorted in the boom area,
each company’s logs together.
The logs were difficult to handle because of their size (usually 16 feet)
and the sheer quantity. When the mill had cut the wood into boards, it was
dried and then put on ships heading to various areas. Much of the
wood from Saginaw, for instance, went to the Northeast, where it
was used for building cities and homes. The wood from the west side
of the state was shipped to Chicago, where it was then sent by train
to the Plains states to build homes, cities, and railroad tracks.
As technology improved, the wood in Michigan was quickly taken; especially with the introduction of the logging railroad in the
1850’s. These small engines and their portable narrow gauge track
made it possible to log farther away from the rivers. These railroads
could haul loads of logs no matter the weather. Other improvements
included the use of the crosscut saw to fell the trees much more
quickly than the axe, the circular saw in the mills and the "big
wheel" for logging in the summer months.
Many men made huge fortunes from the logging industry. These men
are often called lumber barons, and Michigan had many. There were many other results
of logging, including the growth of cities around the mills, the
quick spread of farming (the land was easier to clear) and the change
in Michigan’s environment after the trees were gone.
Much folklore arose from the camps and mills. The men were in the
woods many months with only Sundays off. They often sang and made
up stories, many of which are known today. The most famous is Paul
Bunyon and Babe, his Blue Ox. This story as well as others were
often based on real people and exaggerated in the retelling.
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