History: The Custom Lumber Company (History of Abbotsford)
Contact: Stan
Surnames: Wing, Lamb, Brown, Young, Strebe, Hoffman
----Source: Abbotsford Tribune
(Abbotsford, Clark County, Wis.) 07/08/1954
History of Abbotsford - The Custom Lumber
Company By F. B. Wing
During the early 1900’s, C. E. Lamb
built a saw mill, about one-half mile east of the county line and
south of the ANE track; part of this land is now the dumping
ground. This mill would saw barn timber forty feet in length. Later
he added a planing mill. Mr. Lamb ran the mill until 1909, selling
to Charles Brown, who operated it for three years before selling it
to George Strebe.
The Abbotsford Bank owned some lots and
mill equipment at Dorchester. They disposed of this property to A.
J. Young, who traded it to George Strebe for his mill at
Abbotsford. George Strebe owned timber, located near Goodrich and
moved his mill from Dorchester to Goodrich. Mr. Young, with the aid
of C. W. Hoffman, an experienced lumber and mill man, put the mill
in good working condition. Young and Hoffman then formed a
corporation, the Custom Lumber Company. They graded the land,
making the roadbed for a side track leading from the ANE track to
the mill, furnished and laid the ties and the railroad company
furnished the switch and the rails. The Custom Lumber Company
obtained logs locally for a time, then had logs shipped in from
Whittelsey. They loaded the saw dust in box cars. It was purchased
by a St. Paul firm, f.o.b. Abbotsford. The Custom Lumber Company
received $20 a car for the sawdust. They sold hardwood slabs at the
mill for 50 cents a cord. The hardwood slab is from trees that have
leaves, while trees with needles produce soft wood, like the pine
tree.
The Custom Lumber Company operated during
the winters of 1914, 1915, and 1916, running the planing mill in
the summer time. The mill burned to the ground, Sept. 1, 1916,
without a cent of insurance. The lumber piles 200 feet from the
mill were insured. One carload of finished lumber, which was close
to the mill, burned without insurance. The insurance rate on mill
property was so high that it would not pay the company to insure
it.
Having a large stock of lumber at the mill, the Custom Lumber Company bought the lumber shed from the *** Note: The rest of the article was cut off and was not available at the time of transcription.
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