Loggers are protesting against the Nisqually bridge, alleging that the river is a navigable stream and the piers will interfere with logging. This matter had been referred to the War Department at Washington.
Mr. Fred Lotz and family have arrived from Olympia and will live near the mill located in Mr. Arch Price’s neighborhood. The mill is one of the oldest in this section, but has changed hands and will begin work son. Mr. Lotz will be employed in the mill.
The mill at McKenna has been shut down two days this week on account of the “burner” being out of commission
The Whitlatch Lumber company is constructing a shingle mill on the site of the plant which burned early last fall.
There’s to be a Valentine Ball at the local hall Saturday night, February 6. The following Saturday there’s to be a dance at the Smith Prairie Grange hall
O. C. Van Houten, the county’s agricultural expert, delivered a lecture at the Forest school Tuesday afternoon of this week, on “Stock Judging.” A large crow heard him.
Jacob Hettrick, of Yelm, was the purchaser of John Nordmeyer’s mill for which Sheriff Mills went to Yelm to dispose of on execution. Nordmeyer skipped out not long ago without leaving his address, but man debts remained.
The Fox sawmill, near Yelm, was destroyed by fire last Friday night. Loss $2,000. It had been in operation in the timber of that district for a number of years.
David Harrington was killed in Miller’s Mill, at Yelm, Saturday, by the bursting of a cut-off saw he was operating, a portion of which penetrated his body, striking the heart. Notwithstanding the nature of the blow, he lived nearly an hour after the laceration of the vital organs. Harrington came from Michigan about two months ago. He was unmarried.
The McKenna Lumber Company closed its camps last week for the holidays.
The F & W shngle mill, owned by Charles Falkner and E. E. Whitlatch, and several thousand shingles were totally destroyed by fire early Wednesday morning of last week,only the dry kiln being saved. The damage amounted to about $2,500 with $1,000 insurance. The mill,located about a mile out of town, will probably be rebuilt.
It Goes Henry Ford One Better Or So, Does McKenna
By Francis Stone Burns
Tacoma Daily Ledger November 17, 1918
McKenna, Nov. 16.–(Special)–the blue and white old mountain, seamed and scarred, majestic, her throat wrapped in a scarf of mist, turned her face through the late autumn sunshine yesterday to a half hundred towns in Western Washington.
Her serene countenance was kindest to McKenna.
For she looked down–and seemed to know it–on a town with an idea behind it.
McKenna is a mill town. Not only that but it’s the McKenna Lumber Company’s mill town. Its men and women work in the mill; live in the mill houses or a mill hotel or a mill boarding
The boarding house later became the McKenna Home. (From the 1955 Y.H.S. Tornado Annual)
house; farm mill farms with mill capital; buy from a mill store; congregate in a mill club. The church and school and pool hall are the only institutions that the mill doesn’t own, and it’s mostly mill money that goes to support them.
Beats Ford Idea
But the idea is there.
It goes Henry Ford just one better or so; it keeps the company a bit ahead of what the workman wants-or it aims to; it is socialism financed by capital; it’s two men’s hobby with a cost system a-rising it; and it is so far a successful experiment in keeping a Northwest mill running without labor troubles.
That idea is a community owned by and for a permanent body of workmen whose labor shall pay fair returned on the capital invested in the mill, but still give to labor a just reward.
And so it is planned to sell the houses that the company has built to the men at cost plus 6 per cent, with each month’s rent turned into payment for permanent ownership; to make the company store a co-operative workmen’s store. The clubhouse is being paid for by the workingmen through entertainments and the farms-but more of that later.
One of the Largest on the Coast
Plumped down in the center of a prairie close to the banks of the Nisqually river, the mill is one of the 10 largest on the pacific coast, representing an investment of almost $1,000,000. With a capacity of 200,000 feet a day, it averages at the present time about 150,000 feet and keeps 300 hundred men and women busy in the camps and mill, although everything that be lifted and moved and operated by machinery has it.
The logs, cut in the company’s camps are pulled down to the mill on a mile railroad owned and operated by the company, floated in an artificial mill pond into which water is pumped from the Nisqually river, and carried from there up the chute where they are jerked under the hungry teeth of the great band saws by the uncanny, long fingered “nigger bar” operated by levers from above. One of the bandsaws has teeth on both sides and catches the logs “going and coming.” Machinery may be installed until there is little left for one human mind to do, but there are one or two things that machinery can never do; it cannot exercise judgment in grading lumber in the various stages through which the raw log passes and it can’t boss men.
Stacked lumber from the. Located on the east side of the state highway. (Courtesy of Earl "Babe" Herness)
Log Sense Needed
So Roscoe Grant, heads sawyer with his hand at the levers of the great carriage under the band saw, must use the judgment accumulated by years of experience in selecting the logs which go under him. And Theodore Herness with great blue pencil tallies all the output of the mill and grades it as the cut finally passes under his eagle eyes in one of the big wings of the mill.
Over them all, the men and women is D. B. Berry, the foreman, watching with keen eye every detail in the mill to be sure that nothing goes wrong and a whole sawing is lost or spoiled, perhaps, and above W. N. Goodwin, a mill man to his marrow, and loyal to the company and men with whom he works.
The McKenna Mill was one of the first in the Northwest to resort to women employees and has been one of the most successful. There have been from six to eight women employed in the planing mill section for several months. One of them, Mrs. Nellie Query, who feeds a planer, is one of the most efficient workwomen they have.
Last summer the girls in the office spent an hour or two or three each afternoon when work was over in the years, wheeling and loading the light trucks with lumber , and earning their expenses after hours; so that their office pat was clear. It was clean, healthful, out of door work, and a most excellent substitute for tennis they found.
One of Early Times
This is an old community. It was at the shaving stage when Tacoma was born. And the men and women there have been there for a long time-many of them, and more of the itinerant mill population than you would think.
It is because the community is a good one in which to live. The air is fine and keen; the school boasts manual arts and domestic science departments that would create envy in some of the city’s schools; its people are social by instinct and training.
And through its system of farms the company is developing a real rural community for the backgrounds of the town, as every town that is substantially builded must have such background.
Two years ago 1,000 acres of prairie land-that land that Tacoma is ceasing to despise-was purchased by the McKenna Lumber Company. It has been divided into tracts from 7-12 acres in size. The comp[any sells it for nothing down; with water rights from the Yelm irrigation project; it provides lumber for a house and barn and other buildings; provides a cow and pigs or chickens; supplies from its great barns horses and plows or any other modern agricultural implement to cultivate the land; stocks the larder from its store.
Makes Term Easy
It asks nothing for two years except that the tenant improve the land enough to make the additions equal to the materials and money advanced, first payments begin when the second year is up, and the land, therefore, yielding.
That particular part of the company’s affairs is the particular hobby of Valentine May of Seattle, voce-president. L. M. Goldsmith is in charge of the land at the site and for him the little pack in the center has been named Goldsmith Park.
“We have found that the men so far have been pretty well satisfied,” Mr. Goldsmith said yesterday. “We have been fortunate in getting an especially fine class of men on the land. Out of the 70 who have taken up tracts, but four have failed to make good and have left. The crops this year have been surprisingly good. Red clover, berries, cucumbers and vegetables of all sorts grow well on this land. Some of the men have fine crops of sweet corn and they have found that fruit trees grow well.”
New Crop of Homes
All over the prairie new homes-and pretty ones-are springing up like mushrooms, their newness a jarring note in the harmony of gray ad brown and blues, with a dash of yellow cottonwood here and there, but a promise of a rich harvest in sturdy Americanhood in the years to come.
On one of the new houses J. R. Covert, one of the first settlers on the new land, was working to help a neighbor out and add a little to his farm.
“Like this country? Well, yes,” he said. “We are perfectly happy here. This is our first year and on a half acre I raised green onions alone which sold for $126 besides all the dry onions I have. We have six children and they keep well out in the clear air here and we are getting ahead splendidly. It’s close to market here and the land is hard to beat for berries and vegetables.”
A rank outspoken enthusiast for the whole plan is R. L. McKinney, who is assistant secretary and treasurer. A. G. Cook is secretary and treasurer and general manager of the company.
Efficient Accounting System
Mr. McKinney, who left Tacoma to join the company just a year ago, has charge of the office management, but he is interested in the 500 kilowatt steam turbine-there’s only one other in the Northwest- and in the farm as in the system of expert accounting which he has introduced in the office, and through which every mouthful of cud that one of the 20 cows in the company barn chews is accounted for-if you follow me.
R. B. Tweedy of Wisconsin is president of the company. He has large interests in the East and only finds a little of his time each year to spend at McKenna, but his hobby is this company. He likes it because it is an intricate business proposition to be studied and worked out; because the human element enters so strongly into every move on the chessboard of social and economic and financial game which they are working out; and because as head of such a company you have all the fun of being logging camp, mill, railroad, store, land owner, dairyman, real estate dealer and a sort of fairy godfather, capitalist.
Keeps Tab on Labor’s Needs
“It has been our aim to beat the laboring man to it,” Mr. McKinney grinned. “Give him what he wants before he wants it. Every workingman has a pretty definite idea of the pay he wants now, but we do want to have the men who are with us contented and happy and willing to stay on here. We were one of the first companies in the West to grant the eight-hour day; and now we are going Henry Ford’s plan one better because we are already getting our men on the land and providing for them-work in the mills if they want it and the rest of the time on their farms.”
And so it is that W. E. Kelsey, who has gone for 31 years-since he was 5 years old-with his right arm off at the elbow, is a satisfied, expert workman and has been with the company for nine years. While he is certain that there is nothing a man with two whole arms can do that he can’t, it is still rather remarkable that in addition to his work at the mill he has cultivated and developed a five-acre tract outside the town in the evening after work and on Sundays.
“Finest thing you know, this life,” he averred today.
And the company will make a success of it because it has stopped the leaks, Mr. McKinney pointed out. It has just constructed a new wood conveyor over which the scarps for wood will be carried and dropped, to be used for firewood instead of burned in the incinerator.
Women Brighten Town
A story of McKenna would be incomplete without a mention of some of the women in it. There is Mrs. Murphy, who runs the Red Cross and minute women and has had a big helping hand in every woman’s activity thereabouts; and Mrs. Mary Coffman, who since her widowhood has made a real home of the attractive cream and white interior boarding house which the company maintains for its office force and in which a great yellow kitten indiscriminately plays with the bright chintz curtains and the young people ho have come to grow up with McKenna.
The club house is a real social center-or was until influenza made its use as an emergency hospital necessary. Really it has been since then, for everybody in town has had it-the “flu”-some time recently. But in other times there are having picture shows twice weekly; plays on the stage there; club meetings before the bog fire and dances in the ballroom, with a service flag of 20 stars as the honored center of that social household whose every member wears the button of the Loyal Legion of Lumber Workers.
Scenes At The Salsich Lumber Company’s New Town Of McKenna — Mammoth New Industry Tributary To Tacoma.
NEW PLANT OF THE SALSICH LUMBER COMPANY AT MCKENNA.
Tacoma Daily Ledger May 2, 1909 (p. 40)
The Ledger presents herewith the first published picture of the Salsich Lumber company’s big new plan at McKenna on the Tacoma Eastern Railroad, together with a birdseye view of McKenna itself–a thriving little city of 450 people–built and owned by the company.
The plant, which is now operating at less than half its capacity owing to the depressed conditions everywhere prevailing in the lumber business, is another marked indication of the great pine forests which once clothed Northern Wisconsin and Minnesota, and the moving of the center of lumber manufacture to Western Washington.
H. E. Salsich, president and moving spirit in the new company was formerly one of the most prominent manufacturers in Wisconsin and is still engaged in the business there, although output has been very materially reduced in that state by the exhausting of standing timber.
An intimate business associate of the executive officials of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad. Mr. Salsich turned his attention to the timber of Pierce county soon after the Milwaukee began its extension in this direction and in the early summer of 1907 construction of the new plant was begun.
ONLY A FOREST 3 YEARS AGO
Everything connected with the plant and the city of McKenna which is named after E. W. McKenna, second vice-president of the parent Milwaukee system, has been created and established in what three years ago was a virgin wilderness. Mr. Salsich and associates purchased 26,000 acres of prime fir and cedar on the Nisqually river, about 30 miles south of Tacoma and laid out a townsite. The Tacoma Eastern railroad built an extension from its main line at Salsich junction to McKenna to server the mill and the best millwrights in the business were employed in the construction work.
Completed, the Salsich mill ranks as the largest on the Tacoma Eastern and among the largest and finest in all Western Washington.
The mill is of the double band saw type with a double band on one side and single band on the other. Its 10-hour capacity is 250,000 feet of lumber, 100,000 shingles and 100,000 lath. The machinery was built and installed by the Allis-Chalmers company of Milwaukee, and the total cost was $250,000. The mill stands about 20 feet from the bank of the Nisqually river, which feeds water to a huge log pond and having a capacity for 5,000,000 feet. At the present time the mill is operating only on the single band side, the present 10-hour output being less than 100,000 feet. When running at full capacity over 500 men will be employed on the mill and logging camps.
In keeping with the model lines along which the mill has been constructed, the company has built a town, claimed by many to be the most perfect specimen of sawmill city in the United States. Built on land which a few months ago was covered with heavy timber, McKenna boasts row after row of pretty little cottages, with many substantial homes. Streets have been opened, but there has not been time yet for grading and the building of sidewalks.
For unmarried employees the company has erected a big boarding house about a half a mile distant from the mill, and accommodating 150 men. The operating and accounting area of the concern are located in McKenna.
The officers of the Salsich Lumber Company are: President H. E., Salsich; vice-president and treasurer, A. G. Cook; secretary, Charles Law. The directors are the aforementioned officers; J. T. Gregory of Tacoma and H. H. Field, general counsel for the Chicago & Puget Sound railroad.