Ruins of Horseshoe Lumber Company at River Falls, Ala. |
In March, I wrote a column about one of the most severe
weather events ever to impact lower Alabama, the Flood of 1929, which was
arguably the worst weather event in the history of the area. Between March
13-15, 1929, Evergreen received 19.31 inches of rain, and newspapers of the
time called it “Conecuh County’s greatest flood.” As you might have imagined,
neighboring counties were also heavily impacted by the storm.
A couple of weeks ago, I found a news story that was
reprinted in the Dec. 2, 1971 edition of The Evergreen Courant. That story
discussed the impact of the 1929 flood and carried the following editor’s note
- “This article, which was published in
The Mobile Press-Register, date not known, but some 20 years ago, was brought
to The Courant by M.W. Edwards of Rt. 1, Repton and will be of interest to
readers.”
The story carried the headline “Change in Covington County:
Once-Prosperous Sawmill Idled by Flood of 1929” and was written by Mobile
Press-Register reporter Ford Cook. What follows is the complete text from the
story.
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RIVER FALLS, Ala., Feb. 8 – Once a teeming, active town with
huge sawmills and several business, this town is gradually showing signs of
‘giving way.’
Located almost on the banks of Conecuh River in northwest
Covington County, River Falls in 1920 had climbed to a population of more than
1,100 and by 1950 had dropped to less than a third of that.
The era of the 20s was the peak of operation for this town
which was established as a sawmill and farming center in the latter part of the
19th century. It was incorporated as a municipality in 1901 and has remained so
since, though much of the business and industrial activity has shifted
elsewhere.
One of the more glaring reminders of the active past for
River Falls is the remains of what was once a $200,000 sawmill operation here.
Standing on the banks of Conecuh River in the edge of the town’s limits of
today is the concrete understructure of the mill part of this once prosperous
lumber producer.
The Horseshoe Lumber Co. plant – sawmill, planer mill, dry
kiln and other facilities – at its peak of operation covered about 20 acres,
including the log pond. The original mill at this site was built in the 90s and
it was rebuilt with the latest in the then modern machinery in 1923 at the cost
of more than $150,000. This saw mill operated and flourished for six years
until the 1929 flood when Conecuh River spread from its banks and wrecked havoc
with the Horseshoe mill and idled it forever.
With the 1923 remodeling, much of the mill operation had
been changed to a new source of power – steam generated electricity – with
modern equipment throughout. The flood waters undermined some of the mill’s
foundations, washed out miles of the company’s railroads, filled the log pond
with silt and wrecked many of the buildings.
Operators of the mill decided, following a survey of the
flood damage, that it was useless to rebuild it and many of the old-timers
around River Falls say a large part of the machinery, damaged by water, was
sold for junk and the entire lumber operation for Horseshoe ceased.
During its heyday, Horseshoe Lumber Co. not only operated
the most modern lumber manufacturing plant in this area, it also ran eight
locomotives on about 100 miles of rails to bring logs for shipment.
With the fall of this one large lumber firm in 1929, River
Falls has shown a continued slackening in its pace with population figures
showing lower and lower each time a census is taken.
What remains of the town is still active and progressive,
but the old spark, kindled by the virgin pine forests, has gradually died away
for River Falls.
----- 0 -----
The story also included the photo above, and the caption
below the picture read as follows – “RELIC OF RIVER FALLS: In River Falls, a small
town near Andalusia in Covington County, Ala., there can be seen concrete
columns, which once supported part of a $200,000 sawmill-planer mill plant
there. These columns in an old, grown-up area near Conecuh River are all that
remain of the teeming industrial area of nearly 30 years ago. The plant was
known as the Horseshoe Lumber Co. in the days of its operations prior to flood
damage from Conecuh River’s overflowing in 1929.”
If you’re interested in reading more about the Flood of
1929, visit http://leepeacock2010.blogspot.com/2013/03/flood-of-1929-caused-havoc-in-conecuh.html
for more details.
did they have slavery there? was this also a prison?
ReplyDeleteI looked up the Horseshoe Lumber Company today because I saw the name yesterday on some wood that was taken out of my house last summer during rebuilding. Finding out about the company dates the wood to between 1898 and 1929. What is most interesting is that this house is in Vermont. I wonder why, with all the lumber mills up in the North east, someone imported wood from a company in Alabama 100 years ago.
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