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Date: | Fri, 26 Jan 2007 15:12:27 -0500 |
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Hi Jeremy,
I'm not sure what you are after here- what type of wood is it that is
native to the Northeast? What part of the 19th century are you
thinking about? You've probably already learned that major timbering
company activities moved out of New England very early and turned to
western New York and then the Great Lakes region. You'll need to
give a bit more focus to what you mean by Northeast. What species of
wood are you looking at?
Cheers,
Tim
Timothy Scarlett
Assistant Professor of Archaeology
Department of Social Sciences
Michigan Technological University
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(906)487-2359 (office)
(906)487-2468 (fax)
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On Jan 26, 2007, at 2:08 PM, Jeremy Pye wrote:
> Greetings everyone,
>
> I was wondering if anyone on list list has done
> research into the timber industry of the 19th century.
> Specifically, I have some identified wood from a
> historic site from the late 19th century using wood
> native to the northeast. What might be the market
> cost associated with lumber yards in the Great Plains
> obtaining wood from that location. Are there any
> resources which discuss the market flows of lumber in
> that time period? Bear in mind that the railroads
> have come through to many areas at this time.
>
> Best,
> Jeremy Pye
> University of Arkansas
>
>
>
>
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