| Timber
|
|
![]() Logs being towed in the ocean |
|
When
entrepreneur Jack Dalton had the area around the Porcupine gold field
surveyed to build a town, he realized that for so large a project he would
have to have an on-site sawmill, and proceeded to build one that could
produce 5,000 board feet a day. He also produced lumber needed for the
large flumes, the largest of which was a diversion flume constructed by
the Porcupine Mining Company requiring between one and two million board
feet. Demand for lumber continued in the mining district because seasonal
floods frequently washed out the flumes.
Ft. Seward and local canneries were built from lumber that was shipped by sail or steam vessels from Seattle, Olympia, or Portland. The lumber to build the Presbyterian Mission building in Klukwan was shipped to Haines and transported to the village by canoequite a prodigious task. A few small, private mills were operated by some of the canneries during their construction, and for fish traps. Piling for docks was contracted locally, and as these pilings were not treated, they needed to be replaced frequently. A local mill operated by Combs Lumber Company had a capacity of 25,000 board feet in 1907. Local newspaper advertisements proclaimed it "the largest saw and planning mill on Lynn Canal." This mill was destroyed by fire in 1912. Without a strong outside market, the timber industry remained small for many years, with firewood being its main product. |
![]() A common sight during the 1960s and '70s in Southeast Alaska. |
|
| In 1965 another sawmill was built at Jones point by Alaska Forest Products, Incorporated (AFP). AFP also cut cants for the expanding Japanese market. The monthly payroll of $50,000 (1967) had a significant impact on the local economy. Extremely favorable market conditions in the 60s and 70s were followed by years of market slumps, higher prices for raw logs, increased operating expenses, and transportation problems. The company entered the domestic dimensional lumber market for awhile, but finally closed in 1976. |
|
|
The
newly formed Chilkoot Lumber Company negotiated with the state of Alaska
for purchase of the former Pacific Forest Products facility in November
1986. The Company began total renovation in March 1987, and was under
operation in November with approximately 55 local employees on the payroll.
, With 100% of its timber coming from the Tongass National Forest,
Chilkoot Lumber processed spruce into cants, flitches, and dimensional
lumber, and hemlock into 105mm squares, the primary building component
in Japanese post and beam construction. The mill produced 35 million
board feet annually.
For a few more years, despite ongoing problems and obstacles, the Chilkoot Lumber Company continued to operate and nearly double its capacity. The diesel generator blew in January of 1988, forcing the mill to rely solely on a refurbished steam power plant operated by Onsite Energy. Chilkoot Lumber was reported by owner Ed Lapeyri to be harvesting 60 million board feet a year in October of 1990. Difficult timber market conditions and expenses required to meet emissions standards put great pressure on the mills economic viability. Although the mill was reported in January of 1991 to finally meet state standards for clean air, market conditions forced temporary and later more permanent layoffs throughout 1991, impacting the Haines economy with loss of 145 local jobs and a payroll of $5.2 million. Klukwan Inc. and Northern Timber, two other locally based corporations also began scaling back logging operation around this time. A February 1993 snowfall sealed the fate the mill, collapsing major structures and causing millions of dollars in damage. Destroyed were the planer mill, the main sawmill, the banding shed, and fuel sheds. The bank began parting out the mill property later that year. Although a jury awarded Chilkoot Lumber Company $1.22 million damages from Weyerhauser in 1994 following a lengthy court battle over previous grievances, it was not enough to resurrect the project. The Southeast Alaska timber industry declined even more in the mid-1990s as ongoing state and federal studies indicated that allowable timber harvest was to be reduced on both state and federal lands in order to keep the industry at sustainable levels while better protecting wildlife and watershed values. LeRoy "Buster" Benson who started his private mill in 1976 to serve the local construction market with rough-sawn lumber currently operates the primary local sawmill in Haines. Buster gets his timber from State Forestry sales as well as from private landowners. He either purchases logs outright, or will saw half the lumber for free in exchange for the other half. Benson estimates that he produces approximately 250 thousand board feet of rough cut lumber for the local market annually. Several small, private, portable mills also operate in the Haines area. In addition, two lumber companies in Haines, Lutak Lumber and Haines Home Building Supply, offer imported finish lumber for local construction purposes. Many
fine woodcraft artisans, both native and non-native, operate their business
in Haines and use a variety of Alaskan wood and other woods to produce
carvings, turned wood items, furniture, boats, cabinets and homes. Some
of this wood is cut locally, some comes from elsewhere in Alaska, and
some comes from other parts of the nation and the world.
|
Linda
and Rick Shelton, 1978
updated by Barbara Waterbury, 1988 updated by Kathleen Menke, 1997 (c) Sheldon Museum & Cultural Center, Inc. Box 269 Haines, AK 99827 1(907) 766-2366 All rights reserved. No part of this webpage may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission from the Sheldon Museum & Cultural Center. This webpage may be printed only for personal or classroom use. Top of Page
[Home]
[General Information ] [Special
Events] [Collections & Exhibits]
|