
Logging
Logging (Photos)
Southern Sawyer County at the turn of the century was
covered with a dense forest consisting of large quantities of pine, hemlock,
basswood, maple and spruce. It is reported that the first white pine was cut in
southern Sawyer County near what is now Couderay in about 1856. The
exceptionally tall and straight trunks were floated down to New Orleans to be
used for ship masts.
The majority of the big pine in the area was cut just after
the turn of the century between 1900 and 1910. The pine was cut first because it
was utilized for construction of buildings and the fact that green white pine
logs could be floated down the rivers to the sawmills. The hardwood forests were
cut in later years after the introduction of the railroad to the area.
During the early decades of the 1900’s numerous lumber
camps and sawmills gave employment to hundreds of skilled and unskilled workers,
many of whom came from the “old country” and were willing to work from daylight
to dark often in freezing cold. The lumber industry supported such villages as
Couderay, Loretta-Draper, Radisson and Winter. As the families of these
lumberjacks arrived in the area stores, hotels, schools, and churches sprang up.
Roads were built connecting the villages and camps and finally the railroad
arrived bringing supplies and more communication and taking out logs and
finished lumber.
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