University of Washington Libraries
Skip to content  Home : Favorites : Ordering and Use : Help : Blog   
Share
Digital Collections Special Collections : A-Z List : Subject List : Advanced Search  

« Clark Kinsey Photographs Collection

add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
 
Zoom in Zoom out Pan left Pan right Pan up Pan down Maximum resolution Fit in window Fit to width Rotate left Rotate right Hide/show thumbnail
Mess hall crew, St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Company's camp no. 3, ca. 1928
Mess hall crew, St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Company's camp no. 3, ca. 1928
TitleMess hall crew, St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Company's camp no. 3, ca. 1928
PhotographerKinsey, Clark
Dateca. 1928
NotesCaption on image: Camp No. 3, St. Paul & Tacoma Lbr Co. C.K. Kinsey Photo. No. 23

PH Coll 516.3254
Contextual NotesOn June 4, 1888, the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co. incorporates. The incorporators are lumber and real estate magnates who arrive that day by train from Minnesota and Wisconsin. The next day Tacoma headlines shout the event: "The monster milling company of Tacoma organized." The firm, known locally as the St. Paul, spurs what the historian Murray Morgan calls the greatest boom in Tacoma's history. Before the firm was incorporated these entrepreneurs had purchased 80,000 acres of Pierce County timberland, mostly Douglas fir, from the Northern Pacific Railroad's land grant. They had received from the Railroad a small island on the Tacoma waterfront called "the boot" and had purchased other land as well. By 1889, they had built the mill, laid tracks into the forest, established camps and skidroads, and were transporting 50 carloads of logs a day into Tacoma for processing. The St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company was in business until 1947, when it was bought out by the St. Regis Paper Company.

Ohop is a small settlement in the Ohop Valley a dozen miles west of Mt. Rainier in central Pierce County. It was first called Stringtown because the residents lived along a single road in the valley. The name is an adaption of the Indian word, Ow-hap, meaning pleasant.

St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber's camp no. 3 was built at Little Ohop Creek in 1914 and was abandoned in 1940.

Subjects (LCTGM)Logs
Mess halls--Washington (State)
Lumber camps--Washington (State)
Women--Washington (State)
Men--Washington (State)
St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company--People--Washington (State)
St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company--Facilities--Washington (State)
Subjects (LCSH)Cooks--Washington (State)--Pierce County
Waitresses--Washington (State)--Pierce County
Logging--Washington (State)--Pierce County
Location DepictedUnited States--Washington (State)--Pierce County
Digital CollectionClark Kinsey Photographs
Order NumberCKK0592
Ordering InformationTo order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction-info Please cite the Order Number when ordering.
Negative NumberC. Kinsey 3254
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division
Repository CollectionClark Kinsey Photograph Collection. PH Coll 516
Object TypePhotograph
Physical DescriptionSilver gelatin, b/w ; 11 x 14 in.
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned from a photographic print using a Microtek Scanmaker 9600XL at 100 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 3 and resized to 768x512 ppi. 2003.
add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
Contact Us | Change display settings | About | Make a Gift | Privacy ^ to top ^