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Boynton Lumber Company

Brothers Albert and Walter Boynton moved their 50,000 foot mill from Angelina County to Newton County about 1908. The Boynton Brothers chose a site for their mill, just east of Bleakwood, and named the town Logtown. They employed about a hundred men during the 1910 census year, and ran a commissary store and boarding house. Logtown had about 700 residents at the time, but these numbers rapidly diminished when the brothers moved their mill back to Sturgis (White City), San Augustine County.

Working about 100 men in the mills and in logging operations, the Boynton Brothers moved cut timber to the mill on a logging tram from the 3,000 acre pinery they owned. Keelingl lists five miles of tram road operating at the Boynton mill at Logtown.

Code

96

Corporate Name:

Corporate Name:

Folk Name:

Incorporated:

No

Ownership:

Boynton Lumber Company: Albert and Walter Boynton.

Years of Operation:

1908 to 1912

Track Type:

Track Type:

Track Length:

Five

Locations Served:

Logtown Newton

Counties of Operation:

Newton

Line Connections:

Line Connections:

Track Information:

Track Information:

Equipment:

History:

Brothers Albert and Walter Boynton moved their 50,000 foot mill from Angelina County to Newton County about 1908. The Boynton Brothers chose a site for their mill, just east of Bleakwood, and named the town Logtown. They employed about a hundred men during the 1910 census year, and ran a commissary store and boarding house. Logtown had about 700 residents at the time, but these numbers rapidly diminished when the brothers moved their mill back to Sturgis (White City), San Augustine County.

Working about 100 men in the mills and in logging operations, the Boynton Brothers moved cut timber to the mill on a logging tram from the 3,000 acre pinery they owned. Keelingl lists five miles of tram road operating at the Boynton mill at Logtown.

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