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Texas and Louisiana Lumber Company

The Texas and Louisiana Lumber Company of Houston was organized in 1902. Sole owners were J.C. Means, J.S. Bonner, R.W. Wier, and J.F. Helms. (Wier left the firm in 1905 and was replaced by G.M. Duncan). Little has survived of the business' history, but an article which appeared in the July 1905 issue of Southern Industrial and Lumber Review announced the firm's decision to “go extensively into manufacturing and wholesaling.” Records of the Lumbermen's Credit Association, however, do not list the company as manufacturers, either in 1905 or 1907. Surviving letterheads of the business also give little indication of the company being a manufacturer, but they do reveal that the company at least controlled the output of five Texas mills in 1907. One of these mills was at Huntington. It is possible that this mill was sawing contract lumber for Texas and Louisiana Lumber Company contract mill while maintaining its own identity.
The continued operating nature of the Texas and Louisiana Lumber Company is uncertain; i.e., it is not known if the firm remained manufacturers or not. In any case, the Texas and Louisiana Lumber Company was succeeded by the Kelsay Lumber Company on February 1, 1919.

Mill Details

Alpha Numeric Key:

AG

Owner Name

J.C. Means, president; J. S. Bonner, vice president; R. W. Wier, secretary; J. F. Helms, treasurer. G. M. Duncan assumed Wier's position after Wier left the firm.

Location

Huntington

County

Angelina

Years in Operation:

1

Start Year:

1907

End Year:

1907

Decades:

1900-1909

Period of Operation:

Mill appeared on 1907 company letterheads

Town:

Huntington

Company Town:

2

Peak Town Size:

350 in 1910

Mill Pond:

2

Mill Type
Product
Power Source
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