Names & PlacesBricks & MartyrsA River & A BridgeTall TimberRodgers Theatre
Home

hauling a log in Qulin

One white oak log from the Qulin area made a full load.
(Photo courtesy Melville-Quilin Historical Society)

Tall Timber

The tall timber of the virgin forest must have been overwhelming to the earliest settlers of the present-day Poplar Bluff area. In fact, trees were one of the homesteaders' biggest enemies as they tried to clear places to grow enough food for their livestock and large families.

The fertile overflow lands of the Black and St. Francis rivers grew the biggest trees, nourished by centuries of rich nutrients deposited during annual flooding. Enormous bald-cypress and water tupelo thrived in the natural swamps that covered much of the lowlands. Several species of oaks, ash and other hardwoods grew to massive proportions on slightly higher elevations in the bottoms.

In the hills of the northwestern third of Butler County stood vast stands of pine and many other valuable upland trees. It was only in the foothills near the Little Black River that more open or savanna-like conditions apparently existed. Government geologist G.W. Featherstonhaugh, who toured the region in 1834, described the Little Black area as "fine open country, very extensive, and the trees were so far asunder from each other that we could imagine ourselves traveling through some park."

Other than providing plenty of wood for homes, fuel and furnishings, the forests were a hardship in the early years. After picking a home site, usually near a water source, the typical settler selected a likely spot for a future crop field and set about girdling the standing trees with an ax. After the leaves fell, the sun reached the corn, wheat and vegetables planted in the "field." That way, at least a meager crop could be harvested that first season. Actual clearing of the ground often took years.

It was not until the arrival of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad lines form the north and east in 1872 that the commercial harvest of timber became profitable. (And profitable it was. By 1907, Poplar Bluff had 57 manufacturing plants -- most wood-related -- employing nearly 1,400 men with an annual payroll of almost $600,000. Of the $2.1 million in commodities shipped for Butler County that year, $1.9 million was "forest products.")

Fagus sawmill, 1911
Hugo Boeving (left) at his Fagus sawmill in 1911 (photo courtesy Leo Boeving).

Logging and related industries boomed in the 1880s and '90s. Poplar Bluff became a railroad and timber center, a combination that earned the city a reputation as a tough town.

Work in the logging woods and mils was a rough lot. Whether hanging on the end of a crosscut saw all day, trimming limbs with an ax or hand-dewing railroad ties, men who worked in the timber and mills earned their keep, often not even a dollar a day. Most of the work in the mills was hand labor. It was hot or cold, depending on the season, dusty and dangerous. Newspapers of the day were filled with accounts of men killed and maimed on the job,

Hearne timber mill, c. 1920.

Hearne Timber Co. at the south edge of Poplar Bluff about 1920
(photo courtesy Pauline Gray Hearne).

Once a tree was felled, the log was cut into manageable sections to be taken to the mill. Multiple pairs of powerful oxen skidded the massive logs out of the swamps. The leading end of the log was chained atop a "lizard" -- a crude cradle built from a forked tree -- or a mud boat - -a sturdy sled that glided over the muck -- and the oxen did their work.

Several of the major companies built their own rail lines to bring the logs form the woods to the mills Steamboats hauled logs, lumber and merchandise up and down the Black and St. Francis rivers. And, "rafts" of both logs and finished ties were floated down the rivers to mills and rail points.

The Brooklyn Cooperage Company on Poplar Bluff's East Side, operated from about 1900 to 1927. Working 1,200 men at a time, the firm was the largest producer of barrel staves in America. An earlier Poplar Bluff company, the H.D. Williams Cooperage Co., was said to be the world's largest stave mill in its day. Brooklyn Cooperage built its own standard gauge rail line -- the Butler County Railroad -- from Poplar Bluff to several Arkansas communities. Used initially to haul timber, the line eventually carried passengers and general freight. Brooklyn Cooperage closed in 1927, moving to South Carolina and selling the rail line to the Frisco Railroad.

Virtually every imaginable type of wood product was produced in Poplar Bluff, including octagonal "sucker rods" for the oil industry, fancy veneers, tool handles, spokes for Model T Fords, flooring, lath, shingles and specialty lumber of all kinds.

But the virgin forest had vanished by the end of the 1920s and Poplar Bluff's tall timber days were gone, probably forever.

Butler County RR log train

Butler County Railroad log train heads for Brooklyn Cooperage Co. mill in Poplar Bluff. (photo courtesy Moark Regional Railroad Museum).

---

General Research Sources

  • Butler County: A Pictorial History, Volumes I and II, John R. Stanard, 1993-94.
  • The History of Butler County Industry: 1870-1930, Mary Evelyn Collins, 1982
  • Early History of Butler County, Missouri, George R. Loughead, 1987
  • History of Southeast Missouri, Goodspeed Publishing Co., 1888
  • A View of a Growing Town, Richard L. Metcalfe, 1884
  • Souvenir of Poplar Bluff, Mo., Walter H. Kennedy, 1892

This publication is partially funded by a grant from the Missouri Department of Natural Resources' Historic Preservation Program and the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.

Grant awards do not imply an endorsement of contents by the grantor. Federal law prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, sex, age, handicap or ethnicity. For more information write to the Office of Equal Opportunity, U.S. Department of the interior, Washington, DC 20240.

 

Website ContentsColoring Books
They Traveled by TrainHomes of the 19th CenturyHistoric Places & City Landmarks

Home

butlercountyhistory.org/poplarbluff