File:Cooks, waitresses, and blacksmith, Westport Lumber Company, Westport, ca 1920's (KINSEY 2635).jpg

Cooks,_waitresses,_and_blacksmith,_Westport_Lumber_Company,_Westport,_ca_1920's_(KINSEY_2635).jpg(768 × 567 pixels, file size: 64 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

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English: Cooks, waitresses, and blacksmith, Westport Lumber Company, Westport, ca. 1920's   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Photographer
Clark Kinsey  (1877–1956)  wikidata:Q28549748
 
Clark Kinsey
Description American photographer
Date of birth/death 1877 Edit this at Wikidata 1956 Edit this at Wikidata
Work period 1910 Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q28549748
Title
English: Cooks, waitresses, and blacksmith, Westport Lumber Company, Westport, ca. 1920's
Description
English:

Caption on image: Westport Lumber Co, No 108 PH Coll 516.4758

The Westport Lumber Company was formed ca. 1910 in Westport in Clatsop County. The town of Westport was founded in 1856 when a settler named John West established a small water-powered mill at the town site. The Westport Lumber Company based its operations in Westport but its city sales office was in the city of Portland at the NW Bank Building. Myron C. Woodard was the founder and president of the company. Born in Watertown, Wisconsin, he was a prominent lumberman who was also the founder and president of the Silver Falls Timber Company in Silverton. Woodard purchased the mill site at Westport in 1910 and began constructing a large electric sawmill for his Westport Lumber Company. In a 1918 ad, it was boasted that "modern houses" were leased to employees with families while single men were "taken care of in a very comfortable hotel, in which steam heat, hot and cold water in each room, shower baths and other modern conveniences have been installed." During World War I, the mill would run three eight hour shifts a day, and by the late 1920's, the company had reached its peak production, after which the company began to go into decline. There was a brief increase of activity again during World War II, but the lumber production effort effectively eliminated any remaining old-growth timber that was left within economic reach of the mill. Transportation costs had become prohibitively expensive and the company would soon close in the late 1940's and the mill would be torn down in 1956. Woodard died at the age of 71 in 1946, the same year he had retired from the logging industry. (Sources: Lumber Ghosts by Kenneth A. Erickson; "The Westport Lumber Company - Advertisement," The Oregonian, 01-01-1918; "Westport Mill May Close Up," The Oregonian, 04-28-1945; and "M.C. Woodard Succumbs at 71," The Sunday Oregonian, 04-21-1946)

Depicted place Westport, Oregon
Date circa 1925
date QS:P571,+1925-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
Medium
English: Silver gelatin, b/w
Dimensions height: 11 in (27.9 cm); width: 14 in (35.5 cm)
dimensions QS:P2048,11U218593
dimensions QS:P2049,14U218593
institution QS:P195,Q219563
Current location
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Source
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain

The author died in 1956, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 60 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

Order Number
InfoField
CKK02971

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