Author Topic: Logging camps  (Read 3303 times)

Offline Erato

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Logging camps
« on: Thursday 03 November 22 22:25 GMT (UK) »
If you had anyone involved in the rape of the pine forests of North America, here's an  interesting article with (good photographs and excellent links) on logging camps in northern Wisconsin.  I scanned the faces but I don't see my g-grandfather who spent several years, around 1862-1866, up around Lac Vieux Desert logging during the winters and herding the oxen during the summers.

https://recollectionwisconsin.org/lumber-camp-life
Wiltshire:  Banks, Taylor
Somerset:  Duddridge, Richards, Barnard, Pillinger
Gloucestershire:  Barnard, Marsh, Crossman
Bristol:  Banks, Duddridge, Barnard
Down:  Ennis, McGee
Wicklow:  Chapman, Pepper
Wigtownshire:  Logan, Conning
Wisconsin:  Ennis, Chapman, Logan, Ware
Maine:  Ware, Mitchell, Tarr, Davis

Offline Treetotal

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #1 on: Thursday 03 November 22 23:01 GMT (UK) »
What a great collection of photos, they are so clear too. A fabulous archive of social history. Just imagine what it would be like, to find an ancestor at work or play  in one of the photos.
I don't suppose there are too many photos of leather dyers, shoemakers or blacksmiths in any of the UK archives. The best one I have found of a relative was a picture of a bandleader in a music supplement.
Thanks for sharing Erato.
Carol
CAPES Hull. KIRK  Leeds, Hull. JONES  Wales,  Lancashire. CARROLL Ireland, Lancashire, U.S.A. BROUGHTON Leicester, Goole, Hull BORRILL  Lincolnshire, Durham, Hull. GROOM  Wishbech, Hull. ANTHONY St. John's Nfld. BUCKNALL Lincolnshire, Hull. BUTT Harbour Grace, Newfoundland. PARSONS  Western Bay, Newfoundland. MONAGHAN  Ireland, U.S.A. PERRY Cheshire, Liverpool.
 
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Offline Erato

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #2 on: Friday 04 November 22 03:42 GMT (UK) »
You're right, it's hard to find pictures of ancestors doing their working class jobs.  I do have a few farming pictures including one of gg-uncle Henry Charles Chapman standing next to his corn which was as high as an elephant's eye, higher, in fact.
Wiltshire:  Banks, Taylor
Somerset:  Duddridge, Richards, Barnard, Pillinger
Gloucestershire:  Barnard, Marsh, Crossman
Bristol:  Banks, Duddridge, Barnard
Down:  Ennis, McGee
Wicklow:  Chapman, Pepper
Wigtownshire:  Logan, Conning
Wisconsin:  Ennis, Chapman, Logan, Ware
Maine:  Ware, Mitchell, Tarr, Davis

Offline Top-of-the-hill

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #3 on: Friday 04 November 22 10:21 GMT (UK) »
  They were certainly kept well fed!
 I have a few posed pictures of groups of workmen, which include my grandfather and great grandfather, both carpenters.
Pay, Kent
Codham/Coltham, Kent
Kent, Felton, Essex
Staples, Wiltshire


Offline Mike in Cumbria

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #4 on: Friday 04 November 22 11:19 GMT (UK) »
For anyone interested in this subject, the novel "Barkskins" by Annie Proulx is a great read.

Offline youngtug

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #5 on: Friday 04 November 22 12:52 GMT (UK) »
  They were certainly kept well fed!

There is a downside to that;
   https://www.shorpy.com/node/7794

Offline Top-of-the-hill

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #6 on: Friday 04 November 22 13:02 GMT (UK) »
  Oh dear - poor man!
Pay, Kent
Codham/Coltham, Kent
Kent, Felton, Essex
Staples, Wiltshire

Offline Erato

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #7 on: Friday 04 November 22 13:39 GMT (UK) »
"They were certainly kept well fed!"

Tales of Paul Bunyan
Paul's axemen ate so many flap-jacks they couldn't supply the demand. Ole, the Blacksmith, made a griddle so large you couldn't see across it when the smoke was thick.  Sourdough Sam had fifty men with pork rinds tied to their feet skating around the griddle to grease it. The batter was mixed in large barrels and it took a strong cook just to turn the flapjacks, let alone get them to the table.
Wiltshire:  Banks, Taylor
Somerset:  Duddridge, Richards, Barnard, Pillinger
Gloucestershire:  Barnard, Marsh, Crossman
Bristol:  Banks, Duddridge, Barnard
Down:  Ennis, McGee
Wicklow:  Chapman, Pepper
Wigtownshire:  Logan, Conning
Wisconsin:  Ennis, Chapman, Logan, Ware
Maine:  Ware, Mitchell, Tarr, Davis

Offline DianaCanada

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Re: Logging camps
« Reply #8 on: Tuesday 15 November 22 01:30 GMT (UK) »
I found a relative’s photo in a newspaper article about his work as a blacksmith, showed him in his smithy.