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Click here for additional Woodstock
Photos
Photos of the Woodstock Lumber Company
Saw Mill
and it's Woodstock & Thornton Gore
Railroad
When the royal
governor, Benning Wentworth, established the town, by a Royal
Grant,in 1763, it was originally called Fairfield. The
original grantees, led by Eli Demerrit, or Proprietors, as they were
called, sent a committee of 5 to their new town to inspect and
survey it. As far as is known, this was their only visit for
the next 25 years and little was done. None came to live in
their new town.
In the early
1790s, a group from Southern New Hampshire bought most of the rights
of the original grantees, and proceeded to complete a survey of the
land and divided the land into 231 100 acres lots. These lots
were distributed amongst the group and actual settlement
began. In 1799, the New Hampshire legislature, granted the
town a charter under the name of Peeling. By 1800, the population of
Peeling was only 83.
Farming supported
the early settlers, but with little excess production to be sold as
"cash crops". What "logging" was done was essentially for
building homes and heating them. As time went on, logging
would become a major source of income for town residents, and
various woods products enterprises were attempted; some were more
successful than other. The numerous Hemlock trees in the area
spurred the building of tanneries (Hemlock bark was one of the
necessary ingredients for tanning leather.) Maple syrup was
produced, on a small scale, and sold. A starch mill was built,
but the other significant source of income came to be the increasing
number of summer visitors and tourists, drawn by the natural
attractions of the region. The name of the town was
changed to Woodstock in 1840.
The early tanneries and
mills were built on Hubbard Pond, which came to be known as
Tannery Pond on early maps. The first tannery, owned by Isaac
Woodman, was built early in the 19th century. The
first sawmill was that of John McLellan,also on Hobart's
Pond, and it was built somewhere around 1806-1816. The 1840
census indicated that there were 4 sawmills operating. These
were small water powered up and down mills that operated only a few
months of the year-when there was enough waterpower to operate the
mill. At this point in time, small-scale agriculture supported most
residents.
As the 19th century
progressed, this would change, as larger industries came to the
valley and employed numerous local residents. Logging in the
area, on a large scale, began about 1840, when an experienced
lumberman from Maine, Nicholas Norcross, began cutting
operations on about 100,000 acres he had purchased in the
Lincoln/Woodstock area. Logs cut each winter, by a crew of 150-200
men, were floated down the Pemigewasset River, into the Merrimack,
and eventually to sawmills owned by Norcross and his partners, in
Lowell, Mass. (The river drives were a particularly colorful chapter
in the history of logging in this area, and much has been
written. "Tall Trees, Tough Men" by Robert Pike, is an
entertaining and informative book on the subject.) Norcross
and his partners eventually formed a company called The Merrimack
River Lumber Co. The river drives continued for about 40
years, until about 1882 (when the railroad came up the valley) and
the Norcross heirs sold off all their land (about 250,000 acres).
These woodlands would continue to be heavily logged, some by local
mills and some by larger corporations.
The woodlands would
become the property of The Publishers Paper Company, a major factor
in the growth of large scale lumbering in the area, although they,
themselves, never cut a tree. They contracted out the
actual cutting to men like George Johnson, who logged heavily in the
Lost River valley and Gordon Pond area. He developed a
reputation as one of the worst of the "wood butchers". His
logging railroad hauled logs to the mill and town he built and had
named for himself, Johnson, NH. Johnson was said to have had as many
as 600-700 men cutting trees during winters. The other major sawmill
and logging operation, on lands owned by the Publisher Paper Co.,
was the Woodstock Lumber Co. Their logging railroad was known
as "The Woodstock and Thornton Gore Railroad". Another major
contractor was William Veazey. He built a large steam powered mill,
store, stables, and a boarding house, and the Boston and Maine
Railroad built a spur to the mill. The enterprise flourished
in the early years of the 20th century. Eventually he had four
logging camps in the woods, supported and connected by 12 miles of
roads. Much of the timber cut was soft wood, pulp wood used
for making paper. Hardwood, in smaller quantity, was used by
several bobbin mills in the area. (Bobbins were a major
product of the mills and were needed in vast quantities by the
textile mills further down the Merrimack in Manchester, Nashua and
Lowell.)
Large scale
logging continued until the White Mountain National Forest began
purchasing large tracts of land, as had been authorized by the Weeks
Act, of 1911. Fire destroyed the Mill and surrounded buildings
of the Woodstock Lumber Co. in 1913 and the company was defunct by
1915.
Throughout the entire
period, Woodstock's other major industry, tourism, also
flourished.In the 1870s stage coaches from the end of the railroad
in Plymouth brought visitors to the 8 or 10 boarding houses.
When the railroad was extended to Woodstock in 1883, boarding houses
were replaced by large resort hotels. By 1905, more than
2,500 tourists arrived each by rail each summer. The largest
was the Deer Park Hotel,and others were the Mountain View House
(which was one of the first), The Russell House, The Alpine, Cascade
House, Fairview House, and several others.
.
The post card below shows the mill
and mill pond.
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