The tough men of timber: Black and white photos capture the arduous lives of 1800s lumberjacks who felled enormous trees using only hand tools and brute strength
- December 15th, 2015
Lumberjack style has
recently come back in vogue, with city slickers and suburbanites donning
the flannel shirts of the profession as a way to look rugged.
However, a series of
photos reveal the grueling work that loggers put in during the 1800s and
beginning of the 20th century, toiling through hard lives away from
their families while living in camps with their coworkers.
Conservation efforts would
eventually put a stop to the felling of magnificent redwood trees in
places such as northern California, but logging became a huge industry
across many parts of the nation as companies looked to supply wood for
new housing in growing urban centers..
Lumberjacks, many of whom
came from farms before heading to the woods to make money logging, took
pride in the trees they cut and posed for pictures on massive stumps
using the growing technology of photography.
While the work was
dangerous, the woodworkers also developed sports such as logrolling that
are still practiced by outdoorsmen in competitions today.
Though the job of
lumberjacks has since largely been mechanized, below are photos of
lumberjacks from the turn of the last century as they looked to make
their mark on America using only hand tools.
Taking pictures on the stumps of trees recently cut down became a tradition for lumberjacks of the 1800s and early 1900s
Above,
five loggers sit on the stump of a tree that they fell in Deming,
Washington in 1925 as the scattered limbs of other trees lie around
The
logging industry accelerated quickly in the 1800s as more wood was
needed for settlers expansion westward towards California and the
Pacific Northwest
The
sheer amount of trees cut around the turn of the 20th century was
staggering. Above, a logger almost blends in with the cut trees
Logging
has largely become mechanized now, thanks to technological advancements
in the 20th century. Above, loggers in Minnesota in 1937 look for a
strong log to build a loading boom
In the early 20th century, loggers used hand tools such as two-men saws (Top) to carve into trees that dwarfed them in size
Loggers
had to use teamwork to move that large pillars of wood. Above, a group
in the 1930s moves a log into a river in West Virginia
Lumberjacks
developed a reputation for being the manliest of men because of the
danger of their work and the strength required to do it
The
lumberjacks would often leave their families and live in camps where
hundreds of their fellow workers relaxed between grueling shifts
Above,
loggers in 1892 standing in the trunk of a tree they chopped down at
Camp Badger in Tulare County, California. The tree went to the Columbian
Exposition in Chicago the next year
Above, loggers sit on chunks of trees that they chopped down while looking around at the remaining forest surrounding them
Above,
three loggers in 1900 stand next to a large fir log which has been cut
using a sawing machine in Sedro-Woolley, Washington
The
loggers would used the system of American rivers to ship the massive
quantities of wood to sawmills where it would be turned to lumber
The
lumberjacks had to worry about log jams stopping the flow of the
product downriver. Above, loggers in Idaho clear a jam in the 1930s
Above,
several log rollers in the 1930s break up a log jam on the Little Fork
River during the last log drive on that river in Koochiching County,
Minnesota
The primitive methods of felling and moving trees developed in the 1800s (top) would eventually be changed by technology including trucks (bottom)
Conservation
would eventually stop lumberjacks from downing some of the nation's
more majestic trees, such as this Giant Sequoia undercut in 1902
Above,
a team of horses pulls a sled filled up with red and white pine logs in
Red Lake County, Minnesota, at the beginning of the 20th century
Horses
were often the hardest workers on many of the logging camps, pulling
trees such as these ones seen on a carrying vessel in 1890
Logging
took place all over the country, including in the South in spots such
as Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. Above, the parish in 1904
Above,
a crew stands among cut old growth longleaf pine near the settlement of
Neame, now called Anacoco, in Vernon Parish, Louisiana
Above, loggers in Michigan load a series of white pine logs onto a train to be carried to a sawmill
Above,
a crew in 1900 Washington state poses next to a donkey engine used for
yarding logs, or gathering logs together after they are cut
Above, a logger unloads a cypress log at Watertown, Osceola National Forest, Florida, in 1937
Above, JW Edwards of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, poses with his ax in 1942. He was a life-long timber cutter
Gain instant access to 16,000 woodworking sketches.
ReplyDeleteTeds Woodworking has over 16,000 woodworking plans with STEP BY STEP instructions, sketches and blueprints to make all projects simple and easy.
Who took the photo
ReplyDelete