Logging Oregon's Coastal Forests - (Images of America) by Mark Beach (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- For the first 60 years of the 20th century, logging dominated the physical, economic, and social landscape of the Oregon coast.
- About the Author: Author Mark Beach, a historian who has lived on the Oregon coast for over 30 years, explains the many ways loggers turned trees into logs, then moved them to mills to cut them into lumber.
- 128 Pages
- History, United States
- Series Name: Images of America
Description
Book Synopsis
For the first 60 years of the 20th century, logging dominated the physical, economic, and social landscape of the Oregon coast. Millions of trees fell to axes and saws. Millions of dollars bought land and machines. Thousands of young men sweated in the forests and swaggered in the towns. Mills from Astoria to Brookings belched smoke and shipped lumber throughout the world. As the industry responded to its worldwide market, it went from boom to bust and back to boom. Every decade brought new technologies that meant fewer loggers could cut more trees and send them to mills faster than ever. This book, which includes historical images from museums, agencies, and personal collections, reveals the dangers and pride loggers experienced as part of their profession and captures the culture of logging as forests shrank and markets grew.
About the Author
Author Mark Beach, a historian who has lived on the Oregon coast for over 30 years, explains the many ways loggers turned trees into logs, then moved them to mills to cut them into lumber. Hundreds of locals have enjoyed his presentations and publications about the history of the Nehalem Bay area.