Walter Huber Meyer papers 1912-1978
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Pacific Northwest Forest Experiment Station (Portland, Or.)
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Meyer, Walter H. (Walter Huber)
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Walter Huber Meyer was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1896. He received B.A., M.F., and Ph.D. degrees from Yale University in 1919, 1922, and 1929 respectively. Meyer served in the United States Forest Service and was a professor of forest management at the University of Washington. From 1939 until his retirement in 1963 Meyer taught in the Yale University School of Forestry and authored textbooks on forest valuation and mensuration. Meyer was active in forestry organizations and served as a ...
Yale University. School of Forestry. Faculty.
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Georgia-Pacific Corporation
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Fordyce Lumber Company.
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Dr. John Wenzel Watzek, Charles Warner Gates, and Edward Savage Crossett founded the Fordyce Lumber Company at Fordyce, Dallas County, Arkansas in 1890. In the same year and as part of the same investment, the Fordyce & Princeton Railroad Company was organized and laid a track from the Cotton Belt Railroad System to the Fordyce mill one mile away. When the mill was opened the track was extended northward from the mill into the timber for a distance of 221 miles for the purpose of hauling log...
United States. Forest Service
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The evolution of the USDA Forest Service is rooted in the General Provision Act of l89l in which Congress authorized the President to designate particular areas of the forested public domain to be set aside as "reserves" for future use. The number and size of these reserves increased notably in l897 when the President was authorized to establish reserves in order to protect watersheds, to preserve timber, and to provide lumber for local use. There was no provision for management or...
Crossett Lumber Company
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Edgar Woodward "Cap" Gates, an Iowa lumberman; Charles W. Gates, his brother; Edward S. Crossett, a veteran lumberman; and Dr. John Watzek, an investor, incorporated the Crossett Lumber Company in 1899. They purchased more than 50,000 acres of land in southeast Arkansas and built the company mill town of Crossett, Ark. The Crossett Lumber Company consulted with foresters from Yale University and the Federal Bureau of Forestry to begin sustainable lumbering in the 1920s. It expanded from a lumber...
J. Neils Lumber Company
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Lumber company incorporated in Sauk Rapids, Minn., 1895; expanded in 1899 with purchase of a second mill at Cass Lake, Minn.; operations in Beltrami, Cass, Hubbard, Itasca, and Koochiching counties in northern Minnesota; in Libby, Kalispell, and Lincoln counties in Montana; and Klickitat, Wash.; offices moved from Cass Lake to Washington in 1922; in 1957 company merged with St. Regis Paper Company; also owned Montana Light & Power Company which was purchased in 1944. From the des...