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Morrill Orchard Company and Brunswick Lumber Company

Local historical memory or tradition has little about this mill . According to H. C. Polk, Jr., his father worked at the mill located at �the Morrill Orchard� shoeing horses for the outfit. The tram operations involved more than six miles of tracks and a crate and basket factory in order to ship its goods over the St Louis Southwestern.

W. T. Block wrote that �The old Fairres Farm on present-day Highway 21, where once penitentiary convicts worked as contract laborers, eventually became the huge Morrill Orchard Company in 1903, and along with Brunswick Lumber Company, had its rail head located at Brunswick Switch.�

Code

188

Corporate Name:

Corporate Name:

Folk Name:

Incorporated:

Ownership:

Morrill Orchard Company and Brunswick Lumber Company

Years of Operation:

1906 to 1910

Track Type:

Track Type:

Track Length:

Six miles

Locations Served:

Morrill
Cherokee

Counties of Operation:

Cherokee

Line Connections:

Line Connections:

Track Information:

Track Information:

Equipment:

History:

Local historical memory or tradition has little about this mill . According to H. C. Polk, Jr., his father worked at the mill located at �the Morrill Orchard� shoeing horses for the outfit. The tram operations involved more than six miles of tracks and a crate and basket factory in order to ship its goods over the St Louis Southwestern.

W. T. Block wrote that �The old Fairres Farm on present-day Highway 21, where once penitentiary convicts worked as contract laborers, eventually became the huge Morrill Orchard Company in 1903, and along with Brunswick Lumber Company, had its rail head located at Brunswick Switch.�

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