Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Huttig’s Union Saw Mill part of Weyerhaeus­er Co. history

- — Bob Besom This story is adapted by Guy Lancaster from the online Encycloped­ia of Arkansas, a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. Visit the site at encycloped­iaofarkans­as.net.

The Union Saw Mill company, based in Huttig in southern Arkansas, was the creation of experience­d timbermen in St. Louis and Lufkin, Texas. The name of the company probably derived from the location of most of the timber: Union County, Arkansas, and Union Parish, Louisiana.

Union Saw Mill’s first pine mill began operating in 1904. The year before, the company had also begun constructi­on on a town next to the mill site. The town was named after C.H. Huttig, one of the St. Louis investors. Within two years, Huttig had streets, water, electricit­y, schools, churches, a company store, a hotel, an icehouse, a meat market and hundreds of houses. In time, a peach orchard, cotton gin, newspaper, company bank, community house, bowling alley, skating rink and movie theater were added. Some of these additions were owned by outsiders, but all were sanctioned by the company. A hospital was constructe­d and company employees were required to contribute to the Huttig Welfare Associatio­n, which paid for medical and dental services. Residentia­l areas for Black and white workers were separated by a 25-acre reservoir.

By 1910, a second pine mill had been added in Huttig. Fires struck the mills, most notably in May 1921 and October 1933, but a new sawmill opened in 1934. The company also operated a box factory in Huttig from the 1920s through the 1940s. Logs for the Huttig mill were harvested from thousands of acres of timberland the company bought and also from independen­t contractor­s. At first, the company sold its land once the timber was harvested, but by the 1920s the Union Saw Mill was keeping cut-over land and managing it for future yield. The company leased some of its land for oil and gas exploratio­n.

Union Saw Mill used the Ouachita River and various railroad lines to move logs to the mill and lumber to markets. Rail connection­s northward — from nearby Felsenthal into El Dorado — were accounted for when the first mill was built. Union Saw Mill stockholde­rs invested in the Little Rock and Monroe Railway Company in order to complete a 41-mile line south from Felsenthal to Monroe, La., to ship product to market. In 1905, the Union Saw Mill sold that line to the Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. Union Saw Mill created the Louisiana and Pine Bluff Railway to help move timber. The Louisiana and Pine Bluff Railway had its own locomotive­s, logging cars and crews, and it built spur lines out into company forests.

Union Saw Mill workers organized in the 1930s and, by the 1940s, were represente­d by the United Brotherhoo­d of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 2660. In time, contracts were negotiated by the United Brotherhoo­d of Carpenters, Local 2346.

Frank W. Scott, who was born in 1877, was a major player in Union Saw Mill operations for more than three decades. He served first as secretary-treasurer, then vice president, and, beginning in 1931, president. Scott managed the constructi­on of the railroads, the town and the mills. Scott also represente­d the company in various state organizati­ons; he was elected president of the Associated Industries of Arkansas and the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce, and he chaired the Arkansas Centennial Commission. He oversaw the entire operation of the company until the late 1930s, when his health began to fail. He died in 1954.

In 1925, the Union Saw Mill became part of E.A. Frost’s Frost Lumber Industries of Shreveport. Frost Lumber Industries was sold in 1952 to Olin Industries of East Alton, Ill. The sale included Union Saw Mill, its railroad and some 250,000 acres of timberland. Fred H. Wilson followed Scott as manager of Union Saw Mill and ran the company until it was sold to Olin Industries.

The Huttig sawmill was thoroughly overhauled by Olin in the 1950s, and a plywood mill was added in 1971. Huttig remained a company town until the 1950s when Olin Industries sold its town properties. Residents of nearby Felsenthal were fundamenta­lly connected to Huttig and its institutio­ns.

In 1974, Olin — which had become Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. — spun off its wood products division headquarte­red in West Monroe, La.. The division, called Olinkraft, included the Huttig sawmill. In 1979, Manville Corporatio­n of Denver bought Olinkraft and made it part of Manville Forest Products Corp. The plywood mill operated until 1988. In 1991, the name was changed to Riverwood Internatio­nal Corp. In 1996, Plum Creek Timber Company of Seattle bought Riverwood, and in 2000 Plum Creek sold the Huttig sawmill to West Fraser Timber Co. of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Plum Creek kept the timberland.

In 2004, West Fraser completed a comprehens­ive modernizat­ion of the mill. In 2016, Plum Creek merged with Weyerhaeus­er Co.

 ?? (Courtesy of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, Central Arkansas Library System) ?? Bird’s-eye view of the Union Saw Mill in Huttig (Union County); circa 1907–1912
(Courtesy of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, Central Arkansas Library System) Bird’s-eye view of the Union Saw Mill in Huttig (Union County); circa 1907–1912

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