340:, and the logs were floated down the river to the lake when they were caught and then processed in the mill. Logs were also floated down the Etomami, Little Swan, and North Armit Rivers, which all eventually flowed into the Red Deer River. In the late summer and fall, an emphasis was put on getting logs cut. In the winter, once a snowpack was established, horse-drawn sleighs could be used to transport the cut logs from the fall down to piles on the nearest riverbanks. In the early summer, once the ice cleared on the rivers, the logs would be set in the river and the log drive would begin.
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Most of the lumber produced at Red Deer Lake was exported to the United States, but this practice stopped once the US closed their border to
Canadian lumber, and this border closure was one of the factors that eventually led to the downfall of the company.
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Some of the logging areas had work camps where workers could live, and these camps could accommodate around 200 people per camp. Approximately 2000 people were employed by the company in total.
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The Red Deer Lake sawmill was one of
Manitoba's three largest sawmills, with the other two being those at
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for transporting workers around the lake, and up and down the river, and various other
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William Henry Cross, a real estate dealer from
Winnipeg, MB who invested $ 50,000
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Fredrick B. Lynch, a real estate dealer from St. Paul, MN who invested $ 100,000
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The company began operations in 1901, and was founded by the following people:
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The company also created two settlements to serve the mill: the community of
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Manitoba
Culture, Heritage, Tourism and Sport - Historic Resources Branch
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was built near the mill on the lakeshore, and the community of
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The sawmill closed in 1926, and the company was then sold to
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By 1907, a controlling interest in the company was owned by
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283:were used to build a sawmill on the south shore of
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432:Valley Echoes: Life Along the Red Deer River Basin
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236:Orlando A. Robertson, a real estate dealer from
434:. Winnipeg, Manitoba: Inter-Collegiate Press.
295:line to the south, which had been built to
291:was also built to connect the mill to the
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177:Learn how and when to remove this message
336:Wood for the sawmill was cut along the
264:All five of the above became the first
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485:Defunct companies of Saskatchewan
447:"The Lumber Industry in Manitoba"
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17:Red Deer Lumber Company
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287:. From the sawmill, a
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247:who invested $ 100,000
240:who invested $ 200,000
209:on the south shore of
68:The Pas Lumber Company
257:who invested $ 50,000
201:operations along the
346:The company owned a
319:Union Lumber Company
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238:St. Paul, MN
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167:October 2022
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109:Please help
104:verification
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74:Headquarters
22:Company type
459:October 26,
281:investments
474:Categories
416:2019-10-26
391:2019-10-26
366:References
332:Operations
301:Swan River
137:newspapers
51:April 1926
356:wannigans
348:steamboat
289:rail spur
274:Secretary
270:President
218:Grandview
64:Successor
59:Purchased
79:Winnipeg
34:Forestry
30:Industry
312:Barrows
228:History
222:The Pas
207:sawmill
199:logging
151:scholar
48:Defunct
40:Founded
25:Private
352:barges
297:Erwood
193:was a
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450:(PDF)
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461:2019
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56:Fate
43:1901
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