Weyerhaeuser Company..... Iowa To Washington
We here in the heavily timbered land of the
Pacific Northwest have certainly seen and heard the name of Weyerhaeuser
Company and know it has something to do with the timber and lumbering industry.
We’d never have guessed that Frederick Weyerhaeuser (1834-1914) began his company
in the Mississippi River town of Davenport, Iowa, but he did.
By 1903, Weyerhaeuser owned more than 1.5 million acres of
land in Washington even though he kept his residence in St. Paul. He was
survived by seven children; his son, John P. Weyerhaeuser, succeeded him as
president of the company. Demands for lumber during World War I led to a
substantial increase in the company’s business. The military demand for lumber
was so high that the Army sent soldiers to work as lumberjacks in
Weyerhaeuser’s forests to increase production. By 1941, industry executives
joined John P. Weyerhaeuser and Washington Gov. Arthur Lang in dedicating the
nation’s first tree farm near Montesano.
And it all started with a hard-working German
immigrant in a small Midwestern town.
(Thanks to www.historylink.org for the information on Weyerhaeuser.)
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