Big Timber Big Men : A History of Loggers in a New Land
by
Carol Lind
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0888390203
ISBN-13
9780888390202
Publisher
Hancock House Publishers Ltd ,Canada
Imprint
Hancock House Publishers Ltd ,Canada
Country of Manufacture
CA
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jan 1st, 1978
Print length
160 Pages
Weight
612 grams
Dimensions
27.90 x 21.60 x 1.60 cms
Product Classification:
Industry & industrial studies
Ksh 5,600.00
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A colorful history of logging and its movement from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coast. Carol tells the story of those colorful, hardworking and hard playing men who left their mark on the lands. This book is not a definitive study of the logging industry. It would take a series of volumes and the contribution of many historians to accomplish that purpose. This title is more a series of events. Nor should one conclude from the chapters pertaining to the labor movement that all the logging companies are bad. For every company against the fledgling unions was another which provided medical care and emergency methods to transport the injured out of the woods to company hospitals--such as the one provided by Walter M. Reed of Simpson Timber, McCleary, Washington; clean bunk houses, even family apartment buildings such as provided by Polson Logging Company, Montesano, Washington; European trained chefs--such as imported from the New York Waldorf Astoria by the Schafer Brothers of Upper Satsop, Washington, to cook for their loggers; weekend trips into town for loggers and their families--such as provided by Simon Benson Logging Company; company safe deposit vaults--such as provided by Pope and Talbot of Port Gamble, Washington (which company''s houses resemble a New england village); modern management techniques--early used by the James logging Company of Cowichan, British Columbia. Nor were all the loggers as a group entirely made up of men anxious to get drunk on those twice-a-year holidays. Those who were not part of the get drunk-and-spend-your-pay crowd were usually loners or went home to visit their families. For some, being loggers was a chosen way of life; they would have it no other way. But it was a hard life, and liquor softened sharp edges of grim reality. For others, there was no other opportunity, thus discontentment.
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