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[Southern Pine Lumber Company Dry Kilns - Aerial]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company dry kilns. The kilns were built by the National Dry Kiln Company of Indianapolis, Indiana. The structure consisted of six rooms 2,400 square feet each that could hold up to 300,000 feet of lumber and turn out 100,000 feet of dried stock daily.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Lumber Yard with Housing in the Background]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company lumber yard with company housing depicted in the background.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Lumber Yard - Looking South]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company lumber yard, showing hand stacked lumber air-drying, with employees loading and unloading lumber carts. This view is looking south.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Band Saw]

Photograph of a band saw inside the Southern Pine Lumber Company sawmill in Diboll, Texas.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Lumber and Lath Stacks as they come from the Dry Kiln]

Photograph of lumber and lath stacks and they come from the dry kiln.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Lumber Yard]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company lumber yard showing hand-stacked lumber drying.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Dry Shed - Aerial]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company dry shed with stacked lumber surrounding the building. The planing mill is depicted in the background on the left.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Dry Kilns - Aerial 2]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company dry kilns. The kilns were built by the National Dry Kiln Company of Indianapolis, Indiana. The structure consisted of six rooms 2,400 square feet each that could hold up to 300,000 feet of lumber and turn out 100,000 feet of dried stock daily.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Lumber Yard Alleyway]

Photograph of a view down an alleyway in the Southern Pine Lumber Company lumber yard. Also depicted is a worker hauling a cart of lumber. Note the primitive electric light poles. The dynamo, or electrical generator, was located in the dry kiln boiler room and used the boilers to produce power.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Dry Kilns]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company dry kilns, also showing workers with a cart of lumber. The kilns were built by the National Dry Kiln Company of Indianapolis, Indiana. The structure consisted of six rooms 2,400 square feet each that could hold up to 300,000 feet of lumber and turn out 100,000 feet of dried stock daily.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Shed Interior]

Photograph of the interior of a Southern Pine Lumber Company shed showing stacked lumber and various workers. This could be the dry shed or the dressed lumber shed.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Stacked Lumber near a Shed, Possibly the Dry Shed]

Photograph of a stack of lumber outside of what is possibly the Southern Pine Lumber Company dry shed.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Lumber Shed Interior - 2]

Photograph of the interior of a Southern Pine Lumber Company shed, either the dry shed or dressed lumber shed.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Office Worker at Safe]

Photograph of a Southern Pine Lumber Company office worker near two safes. This is likely in the Texarkana, Arkansas main office.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Worker with Record Books]

Photograph of a Southern Pine Lumber Company worker at a table with record books. It appears that he is placing a seal on a document or binding a book. This is likely in the Texarkana, Arkansas main office.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Saw Filer Shop]

Photograph of two Southern Pine Lumber Company workers filing circle saws in a saw filer's workshop.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Boilers]

Photograph of a Southern Pine Lumber Company boiler room also showing an employee.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Machine Shop]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company machine shop where steam locomotives were maintained. A locomotive is shown inside the shop.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Boilers - 2]

Photograph of the interior of a Southern Pine Lumber Company boiler room.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Mill Ponder Workers at the Bottom of the "Endless Chain"]

Photograph of three Southern Pine Lumber Company mill pond workers guiding and loading logs onto the endless chain at the mill pond, where logs were pulled by the chain into the saw mill.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Southern Pine Lumber Company Sawmill view from the Mill Pond]

Photograph of the Southern Pine Lumber Company sawmill from the mill pond. The photograph shows the endless chain extending from the mill into the pond, and the angled dock from which logs were dumped into the pond off of rail cars. Construction for this mill began on March 1, 1903, and the mill became operational on June 12 of the same year. The mill was powered by a 500 horse powered Filer & Stowell 24x40 inch Corliss steam engine, producing 250,000 board feet daily as well as 60,000 feet of lath. It replaced the original mill that was built in 1894. This mill was destroyed by fire on January 7, 1968 and rebuilt by September of that year.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Logs being unloaded into the Mill Pond]

Photograph of timber logs being unloaded from log cars into the Southern Pine Lumber Company mill pond. This view is looking outward from the sawmill.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Texas South-Eastern Railroad Engine 3 at the Southern Pine Lumber Company Mill Pond]

Photograph of Texas South-Eastern Railroad engine 3 ready to unload logs into the Southern Pine Lumber Company mill pond. The photograph shows how mill pond workers would release the chained logs using poles. The TSE railroad was founded in 1900 by the same owners of Southern Pine Lumber Company and served the company's logging operations. It also provided passenger service from Diboll to Lufkin until 1942.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Logs in the Southern Pine Lumber Company Mill Pond]

Photograph of logs in the Southern Pine Lumber Company mill pond.
Date: 1903
Creator: American Lumberman
System: The Portal to Texas History