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HISTORY OF
It all started when two lumber barons in San Francisco, Hiram T. Smith and Austin D. Moore, purchased 30,000 acres in California, in the high Sierra Nevada mountains, in an area known as Millwood. Over the next few decades, this would be the stage of one of the most challenging -- albeit the most destructive -- lumbering ventures in history. Originally, Hiram Smith planned to build a railroad to carry the From 1890 to 1892, the Kings River lumber operation was in full swing. The Kings River Lumber Company employed 300 men in its deforesting operation and an extra 200 men in Sanger' box factory, door and sash factory, planing mill and drying yard. Although the future looked bright for Smith and Moore and the Kings River Lumber Company, many financial woes were coming their way. The massive Panic and Depression of 1892 hit the whole nation and the Kings River Lumber Company went bankrupt. After two years of negotiating loans, Smith & Moore reopened for business under the new name of the Sanger Lumber Company. Shortly afterwards in the summer of 1895, the creditors foreclosed, and in 1896 they shut down the lower mill and moved the lumbering operation to the heart of Converse Basin.
In the midst of a dwindling credit base, the Sanger Lumber Company was sold
to an investors group in Michigan led by Thomas Hume in 1905. It was then renamed
the Hume Bennett Lumber Company. The operation went on for nearly another decade being hit by a multitude of setbacks, the death of Thomas Hume, a fire that destroyed the mill and a massive forest fire which destroyed 7 miles of flume in 1926. Thomas Hume's son, George, sold the physical equipment for $20,000 in 1927 and in 1935 sold a total of 20,000 acres including Converse Basin and the surrounding areas to the U.S. National Forest Service. This area is now part of the world famous Sequoia National Forest. As a footnote, none of the lumber barons who took part in this venture during this whole period of history ever made a profit. To return to the Kings River Flume Front
Page,
For more details about the Sanger Depot Museum, call Bob Bosserman at: TEL: (559)875-2848
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