Details for Early Texas Sawmill

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5405007611

Data

Marker Number 7611
Atlas Number 5405007611
Marker Title Early Texas Sawmill
Index Entry Sawmill, Early Texas
Address Columbia Street
City San Augustine
County San Augustine
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 393989
UTM Northing 3489011
Subject Codes mills - textile, fiber, gristmills, cotton gins
Marker Year 1969
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Columbia Street (Spur 547), south side, east of SH 21, west of Ayish Bayou
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text One-fourth mile north to site of Early Texas Sawmill Texas' first million-dollar industry - lumbering - was born to recorded history with the building of two sawmills in 1819. One, located on Ironosa Creek in present San Augustine County, was run by pioneer Wm. Ward; the other was in Nacogdoches. In 1825 yet another mill (one-fourth mi. N) was turning out about 500 board feet of lumber a day. Wm. Quirk was miller. In these times, trees were felled using an ax and a wedge. Then one end of each huge log was slung under a heavy cart and dragged to a stream or road. At the mill the logs were often stored in a mill pond, to keep them from rotting, and then they were sawed by various methods. Two primitive ones -- soon abandoned -- were pit sawing (a slow, exhausting two-man process) and the muley-mill, powered by animals. A later improvement was the sash saw, which was so nearly effortless that one old-timer claimed the attendant "could read the Bible or the ' Galveston News' while the saw was cutting". In the mid-19th century, logging served as a pivot-point for dozens of subsidiary industries; railroad building and lumbering had a strong mutual influence and the gusto of loggers' lore is still alive in the rich heritage of the Piney Woods. (1969)