LUDINGTON, LOUISIANA: A GHOST TOWN OF BEAUREGARD PARISH
© By W. T. Block
(click here for W. T. Block web page)
(MANUSCRIPT RIGHTS RESERVED TO DOGWOOD PRESS, WOODVILLE, TEXAS)
The story of many of the great Western Louisiana sawmills of 1905
was that of large Midwestern retail lumber dealers (Long-Bell, Pickering,
Cental Coal and Coke Company), who followed the Kansas City Southern
rails south from Shreveport into the virgin long leaf forests. The story of
Ludington, Wells, and Van Schaick Lumber Company was quite the
opposite. Chartered at Menominee (Green Bay), on Upper Michigan
peninsula, about 1870 or earlier, Ludington, Wells and Company and some
of its key stockholders first arrived in Calcasieu Parish in 1889-1890, bought
up about 62,500 acres in Calcasieu and Vernon parishes at $1.50 or more an
acre, and waited another five years for the rails to arrive.
Even in 1895, Ludington, Wells and Company did not hurry to
Louisiana, because they did not cut out all of their Michigan timber until
around 1902. Other than Ludington, Wells and Company's 33,697 acres,
Anthony W. and Ellen Van Schaick of Chicago owned 17,945 acres, and
Samuel M. Stephenson of Menominee owned 10,951 acres. 1
The Beauregard Parish conveyances do not even reveal who
"Ludington" was; perhaps he was the founder, who was already dead before
the company came to Louisiana. In his dissertation, "Lumbering in
Southwest Louisiana", Dr. George Stokes noted that the company came from
Ludington, Michigan, a city on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, opposite
Green Bay. Hence the question arises whether both "Ludington" and "Wells"
were 'place' rather than family names, since there is also a Wells, Michigan
on the upper peninsula. At any rate, in 1903 Daniel Wells, Jr. was president
in Michigan, and Isaac Stephenson, Jr., was secretary and general manager
at Ludington, but no one named Luddington, Wells, or Van Schaick ever
lived in Louisiana. J. George Stephenson (exact relation to Isaac uncertain)
was plant superintendent at Ludington. About 1900, Ludington, Wells and
Van Schaick were also chartered and headquartered in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, indicating that the firm probably owned sawmills in both states,
as well as in Arkansas. Stokes also noted that the firm began building at
Ludington in 1901, but other than the initial land purchases of 1889-1890,
subsequent deed records in Beauregard Parish were not dated prior to April,
1903. 2 In July, 1903, the owners deeded a site to the Calcasieu Parish
School Board, provided the latter "would erect a school house on it..." 3
The writer believes the owners dismantled a sawmill at Menominee,
Michigan, probably in 1902, and moved both its mill and its employees to
Ludington. For instance, several key employees at Ludingon periodically
visited their "homes" in either Menominee or Clarinette, Wisconsin (located
across a river from each other). Nevertheless, there is some evidence that the
owners also bought out a small sawmill at Ludington in December, 1903,
when Vernon Lumber Company of Kansas City sold 480 acres at Ludington
to them for $2,880 "with all improvements thereon...." 4
No sawmill was reported at Ludington in February, 1901, whereas Ludington, Wells and Company was reported as sawing 150,000 feet daily
in both October, 1904, and September, 1906. By any standard, however, that
figure was quite modest, because the only two sawmills that either equaled
or surpassed Ludington were located at Bon Ami and Fullerton. Two articles
of 1905 confirm that Ludington was equipped with the first two double-
cutting band saws in Western Louisiana, along with a 48-inch gang saw and
two Berlin flooring machines in its planing mill, as follows:
. . . This (Ludington) and (Trinity County Lumber Company at) the Groveton, Texas sawmill are the only mills in East Texas or West
Louisiana that have two double-cutting band saws (Nov. 1905) 6.... A
48-inch Goldings and Lewis gang saw will be installed at once. A
large blower is being added to the planer and.... two Berlin flooring
machines have been added.... 7
Hence, the above accounts for the opinion that Ludington always cut well
below its sawing capacity.
Ludington may also have been the only area sawmill to pay its employees in cash every two weeks. Two other articles observed that: 8
. . . Friday was what the boys call "good Friday" (payday), which
comes every other Friday.... Tomorrow will be pay day here
(Deridder) and tomorrow at Ludington, one and a half miles distant.
This will throw into circulation $30,000.... 9
From this point on will be presented a series of quotes from the years
1905-1906, that will reveal more about Ludington than any other known
historical source. From the beginning quote - "the Ludington mills and the
Van Schaick mill are models in every particular" - leave much room for
speculation, hinting that perhaps a sawmill dismantled in Michigan and
another, bought from Vernon Lumber Company on December 24, 1903 and
being operated by A. G. Van Schaick, were in operation simultaneously. 10
The quotes, although parts of them may sound repetitious, are too important
to minimize in the attempt to recapture the social history of an important
lumber town, and they follow, in most instances verbatim, here:
. . . The Ludington mills and the Van Schaick mill are models in
every particular. The company pursues the same policy here as it has
in years gone by in Michigan and Arkansas. Nothing but the best is
their motto. In an incredibly short time, they have transformed a very
large area of pine forest into a perfectly laid-out and well-built village.
Sewers and water extend to every house, and the grounds about each
are beautifully laid out. Arrangements have been perfected for the
erection of a handsome school building and a church, and next winter
the best in educational facilities will be provided for the children of
the town.
. . . The Messrs. Stephenson will erect this summer handsome homes
on most desireable sites that recently have been cleared. A
magnificent road is being built to Deridder, one and one-fourth miles
distant, where the three fine automobiles owned by citizens of
Ludington (two of them owned by Isaac and George Stephenson) can
be used. Socially, the little village offers much out of the ordinary.
The fact that Bon Ami, Deridder, and Ludington being only four miles
apart, and Deridder the central point, with its neat Ford's Opera
House, makes it especially pleasant.
. . . The mill is doing excellent work and is under the immediate
supervision of the Messrs. Stephenson. The lighting of the place
deserves special mention. Every street has its lights, and the office and
commissary present a brilliant appearance. The stumpage (uncut
timber) is close and this gives the mill every advantage. The
Ludington Hotel is well-kept, and the guests can find no occasion to
complain.... 11
. . . This is one of the finest lumber plants in the United States. The
lumber firm of Ludington, Wells, and Van Schaick has always borne
the reputation of having up to date mills, and the one at this place is
no exception. When other plants were obliged to shut down last winter
due to lack of logs, this mill continued without interruption to do
business. {Note: Even Ludington had to cease logging during the
week of Feb. 6-11, 1905, due to subfreezing temperatures.}
. . . The town is beautifully laid out, every provision having been
made for water and sewerage. Arc and incandescent lights render the
streets brilliant at night, and good (wooden) sidewalks make all parts
of town easy of access in all kinds of weather. A post office has been
installed, which is greatly appreciated. A park has been laid out and is
now ready for shade or ornamental trees. There will be cages for wild
animals, an owl, a coon, three wolves have been secured, and others
will be added as quarters are prepared for them... A church and a
school house will be built in time for winter use.
. . . The mill is sawing a large amount of (cross)ties, timbers and
piling. The average shipments run to ten (box) cars a day, and the mill
is making an average of 135,000 feet a day. The steam (log) skidder is
doing splendid work, and often when there is a rush, the small skidder
is put into commission.
. . . Four new houses have been built recently, and a large force of
carpenters are engaged in construction. There are 400 men on the
payroll. The company will have an experimental fruit farm the coming
year.... The two automobiles owned by the Messrs. Stephenson give
the place quite an urban air... The company boarding house, Mr. Ellis
Boniface, is an excellent hostelry.... Dr. C. H. Collins, dentist of Lake
Charles, is doing a rushing business.
. . . Ludington boasts a first class baseball club. Its personnel are
Captain Marvin Browning, pitcher; Walter Oostrom, catcher; John
Brewsaw, shortstop; Sim Ratchen, first base; Howard Moore, 2nd
base; Charlie Baker, 3rd base; W. M. O'Leary, center field; M.
Browning, right field; and Oscar Sparks, left field. This club has
played five games this season and has won three. It will play Leesville
Sunday.... 12
Information about the Ludington log tram, "log front," and log pond is
mostly fragmentary. Obviously, the tram railroad was quite short at first
because the timber to be cut was very close to the mill. Main line locomotive
No. 6 was a large Baldwin, on which Cleo Shields was the engineer.
Probably two small Shay engines did switching on the spurs, and at least 40
log cars were needed to haul 175,000 scaled feet of saw logs to the log pond
daily. A large number of track layers and loggers in 1910 were immigrant
Mexicans and Italians. Information about the log pond, probably a dammed-
up creek branch (Bundick, Cowpen?), will appear later.
In order to break the repetition of long quotes, a list of Ludington
personnel, 1905-1910, compiled from news articles and twelve pages of the
1910 census (many pages of which were unreadable), follow: Isaac
Stephenson, firm secretary and general superintendent; J. George
Stephenson, plant superintendent; Louis Lehman, George Labar, sawyers;
Henry Eastham, Hollis Millard, team foremen; Will Martin, Hugh Smith, J.
W. Smith, Alfred Malmsted, machinists; Dr. C. Moody, Dr. H. C.
Harrington, mill physicians; D. J. Charlton, saw filer; Frank J. Heines,
master mechanic; Ed Bangerman, sawmill foreman; Edgar --, planing mill
foreman; F. W. Hornbrook, cashier; C. A. Harrison, bookkeeper; A.
Gammel, invoice clerk; Irene McGillis, stenographer; Clarence E. Gill, time
keeper; Maude Blanchard,Jeanine Jirles, commissary salesladies; Annie
Williams, commissary cashier; J. E. Howe, commissary manager; Martin
Lynch, mill engineer; H. A. Tibbetts, Roland Darby, hotel manager; Chit
Shields, locomotive engineer; William Frazier, skidder foreman; J. T.
Leonard, planing mill oiler; Henry Labar, skidderman; Mark Leveridge,
scaler; Newton Lewis, barber; John DeClue, deputy sheriff; Tony Barnett,
Cream of Kentucky Hotel (?); Jeff Bland, butcher; and Dock Ellis,
pondsman. 13
Ludington news quotes cited many instances of marriages, births,
illnesses, deaths, mill accidents, etc., including a yellow fever quarantine at
Deridder, that was probably a physician's misdiagnosis, as follows: 14
. . . We are by ourselves again. The gates of our little city are closed
to people of the world at large. That is owing to a report that reached
us last night, that they have two quarantine cases of yellow fever in
Deridder. At the present writing, we have no positive assurances that
the report is true.... It's tough on us, nonetheless, as Deridder is noted
for its pretty girls, and quite a few of the young men here have left
their hearts in their keeping... We are once again a part of the United
States as the Kansas City Southern trains are once more stopping
here... The usual Thursday night preaching failed to materialize,
owing to Brother Riggs being quarantined....
. . . Halloween was duly observed here Tuesday night last in various
ways. Our accommodating landlord (Tibbetts) at the Hotel Ludington,
has a sideline of raising hogs, has a kick coming concerning a porker
that the boys put in bed with Mr. N. Nicholson.... Something like
$75.00 has been subscribed towards buying an organ for the new
church... On account of the recent yellow fever scare at Deridder, the
Deridder people who are employed here are idled indefinitely....
The yellow fever quarantine at Ludington apparently continued for
most of the month of November, 1905. The roving staff reporter of
Beaumont Enterprise was likewise quarantined, resulting in what was
probably the best article ever written about Ludington during its lifetime as a
sawmill town, as follows: 15
. . . This model sawmill plant is moving on, oblivious to
quarantine restrictions. The health of its people has never been better.
The Messrs. Stephenson, who control the immense interests of the
Ludington, Wells and Van Schaick Lumber Co., have made the
environments all that could be desired. The sanitary condition is and
always has been as perfect as can be made. The company quarantined
against all infected places, and it was effective, so much so that not
one case of yellow fever has ever appeared.
. . . The mill is turning out 110,000 feet every day. One can not but be
impressed with the convenient arrangement throughout the plant, In
the sawmill, one can pass from place to place without incurring any
danger to life or limb. There is an appearance of roominess in the
mill.... This and Groveton, Texas, are the only mills in East Texas or
West Louisiana that have the double-cutting band saws. At this mill,
which has two, the production is increased 20 percent. The trouble is
that filers than can handle this kind of saw are hard to secure. There is
quite a strife between the woodsmen and the mill men as to which
shall surpass the other, the loggers try to gain on the mill and vice
versa.
. . . Every man seems to take a personal interest in the affairs of the
company.... The logging is now two miles east of Rosepine, but a new
spur is being built to the northeast of Ludington, which will be the
winter camp. A steam skidder and loader facilitates matters greatly.
The skidder has been greatly improved upon since its purchase.
. . . The company is quite anxious to get the boundary lines of its
holdings determined. When the United States made the survey of this
country, it was done in such a loose way that it is well-nigh
impossible to determine the lines. An urgent request for a re-survey
has been made for several years. It is hoped the matter will be
straightened out soon...
. . . A deep well is about to be drilled.... it is hoped to get a flowing
well, and work on it will begin at once. The pond, which is filled with
pure water, no sewage being allowed to run in it, will be dredged out.
The pond has a capacity of a month's cut (3,500,000 feet).
. . . The Ludington Hotel is one of the best. The cuisine is excellent;
beds first class, and rooms, not surpassed by any sawmill hotel. The
culinary department is complete - a fine range, store room,
refrigerator, laundry are concomitants.... Over this Mr. H. A. Tibbetts
presides. He is very efficient and makes an admirable host.
. . . The commissary is complete in every respect. Over this Mr. J. E.
Howe presides. The stock carried is well-selected, and the prices
compare favorably with those in Beaumont. The offices are
commodious and convenient. Mr. C. A. Harrison, bookkeeper, and
Mr. A. Gammell, bill and invoice clerk, are gentlemen who are
thoroughly up in their duties. Mr. D. J. Charlton has made an envious
record as a filer of double-cutting (saw teeth on both edges) band
saws.
. . . There is a mule belonging to the company that exhibits great
intelligence. He hauls his load down the dollyway, and after it is
unloaded, goes by himself to the planer... for another load. He does
not vary 2 feet in the turning place. When used to haul sawdust, he
goes by himself to the pile, wades in belly deep, and stops in a certain
place. No amount of whipping or urging will make him change the
pace....
. . . An alligator was put in the mill pond last year. He comes up and
takes food thrown to him. It is probable the quarantine will be lifted in
a few days. Traveling men (drummers) are coming in. The public
school is now in session and will soon move into the new structure
now being erected. There is a great scarcity of (box) cars. This has
been the greatest drawback during the quarantine.....
The following report of November 26, 1905, reveals one of the
falacies of early sawmill life, the frequency of serious, often fatal, mill
accidents, as follows:
. . . Our master mechanic, Mr. Frank Heins, met with a very painful
and deporable accident in the mill Tuesday, which resulted in his
having to have four fingers amputated....Mr. Conrad Gilstrap is
suffering from an injured foot, hurt while he was working in the mill.
. . . School is now being held in the new school house, which was
ready to occupy Monday last. It was something that was needed very
badly, and much credit is due to the L. W. and V. S. Lumber
Company, who spared no expense in erecting a building... Mr. John
DeClue was recently appointed deputy sheriff at this place, and it
meets with the hearty approval of all our citizens...
. . . The L. W. and V. S. Lumber Company has secured the services
of Mr. Chris Geyer of Lake Charles to put down an artesian well...
Our town has been visited quite frequently by drummers, and we are
certainly glad to see them back, as it brings us back to the days before
the quarantine.... 16
. . . The new Deridder newspaper, the Deridder Enterprise, is meeting
the universal approval of the Ludington people. It was something
Deridder needed quite badly.... Mr. and Mrs. (W. W.) Woods, after
conducting a very successful singing school here, left for their home
in Burkeville, Texas.
. . . The new (48-in.) gang saw, which was recently placed in the L.
W. and V. S. Company's mill, is doing fine work. As one of the boys
was heard to remark, "it sure does chaw 'em up." 17
Another Ludington article of 1906 revealed some interesting facts
about Ludington social life, as follows:
. . . Mr. W. W. Woods and sister... are conducting a very successful
Sunday School. Something like 30 scholars are attending.... Ludington
was well-represented at the Deridder carnival and street fair.
. . . Some excitement was caused here a few days ago, when Chris
Geyer, who is drilling a (water) well, struck a small flow of gas....
Those who attended the Woodmen of the World ball at Deridder last
Thursday say they went the limit as far as having a good time... Your
correspondent on behalf of the Ludington people desires to
congratulate Dr. Harrington of Deridder on securing the position of
company physician...
. . . Main line engine No. 6, which has been in the Beaumont shops
for repairs, arrived here Sunday last, also Master Mechanic F. J. Heins
and Engineer Chit Shields, who have been looking after the
repairs.... 18
Another fine article about Ludington appeared in August, 1906, and
explained one of the troublesome problems of that year, the lack of a well-
defined boundary line, which left the owners uncertain in which parish some
of the mill property was located, as follows: 19
. . . We have every reason to believe, from what we have seen and
heard, that Ludington is the cleanest and prettiest sawmill city in the
South. Situated as it is, it has a natural drainage. Besides the L. W.
and V. S. Lumber Company, in building our progressive city,
believed in the old adage: "Cleanliness is next to godliness."
. . . Ludington has a system of sewers and ditches built which,
assisting nature, keeps our city clean and in perfect sanitary condition.
The company spared no pains or expense in using the best material
and workmen in erecting the best cottages that are occupied by their
employees. They are equipped with all modern improvements, such as
electric lights, water works, and if one requests, electric fans are
installed in their homes at a very nominal expense. Every dwelling is
painted, and its occupants are compelled to keep the premises clean...
. . . A force of men is continually engaged in keeping the streets and
alleys clean. And the tasteful and clean appearance of Ludington is
noticeable to the many strangers that visit it... it would be a credit to
some of our cosmopolitan cities should they copy after Ludington.
. . . The mill is steadily grinding away every day; orders are quite
plentiful for this time of the year. The only drawback that the
company is experiencing is the scarcity of cars necessary to move the
immense shipments of long leaf yellow pine, and that it's only a few
days until a branch of the Santa Fe (Jasper and Eastern Railroad from
Kirbyville) will enter this city, and then the company will have cars to
burn.
. . . Ludington is situated in a stone's throw of the much disputed
boundary line of Calcasieu and Vernon parishes, and at the present
time, representative surveyors of both parishes and a force of
assistants are engaged in establishing a correct line. The surveying
party is at present somewhere near the Sabine River, and information
concerning the location of the new boundary line is hard to obtain.
There are several rumors concerning its location, one of which sys it
will be somewhat north of the present line. If such is the case, it will
cause the removal of a place where cool and refreshing Schlitz is
served, as it will then be in Calcasieu Parish. As that portion of said
parish is local option ('dry,' non-alcoholic only), hence its removal.
Rather tough on us, especially in hot weather.
. . . Several of our people attended the ball at Rosepine last Friday.
Mr. (J. E.) Howe, the efficient manager of the L. W. and V. S.
commissary store, leaves for the northern markets to buy fall and
winter stock..... 19
One must remember that in 1905, Southern antipathies toward the
Northern States, particularly those of ex-Confederate veterans, were still
quite strong, and Ludington was viewed as a "Northern" town, whose
founders and key personnel were all from Michigan and Wisconsin.
Between 1865-1896 for instance, Beaumont, Texas celebrated July 4th only
as a day off from work, not as our national independence day. By 1900,
towns like Deridder were once more celebrating July 4th in grand style, as
witness one aspect of the 1907 July 4th parade, as follows: 20
. . . The float of the Ludington, Wells and Van Schaick Lumber
Company of Ludington won first prize and justly were they entitled to
that honor. Mr. J. E. Howe, the designer of the float, proved himself
an artist of rare skill and deserves much credit for his untiring efforts.
There were no gay colorings, no gaudy advertising, no attempts at
grand display. Merely a simple float, simply decorated. But in its
simplicity lay its beauty. From its top, like so much snow, there rose...
two graceful swans, leading the Goddess of Liberty in the person of
Miss Jeanine Jirles and a bevy of pretty girls, who were holding the
red, white, and blue ribbons from the swans' mouths. On the rear of
the float were two footmen in full uniforms to serve the Goddess....
This beautiful float was drawn by six black horses and driven by Mr.
George Stephenson. On each side of the float, the words from
"Ludington of Course," which signified the best always, as the
Stephensons never do anything by halves.....
Continuing with the social history of Ludington, 1907-1908, the
following long quote conveys items from several articles, each of which is
identified by a separate footnote, as follows:
. . . The singing class accompanied by Bro. Tate went to Pickering
Saturday, where they rendered an excellent program. Ludington has a
class of vocalists that is hard to beat.... 21 The school secured J. O.
Stewart of Deridder for his second year as teacher. Eighty pupils are
enrolled... 22 The addition to the school is soon to commence as the
present building is too small. Plans for building the Ludington
Athletic Club is now in the hands of the contractors, and work on one
of the swellest club buildings in Southwest Louisiana will
commence.... 23 Miss Jimmie Guillory has been employed as assistant
teacher at Ludington... 24 There will be a Halloween party and pranks,
with dried peas thrown on door steps and gates wired together... 25
Rev. A. J. Perryman of Granville, Texas, is preaching in the school
house.... Due to a bad lumber market, the Ludington mill went on an
8-hour work day.... 26 The big auto was loaded to the limit Tuesday
with 20 persons to visit the Long-Bell turpentine camp 15 miles
away... The Congregational Methodists (probably Methodist
Episcopal, North) held a meeting Monday night to perfect
arrangements for a pastor for the coming year.... 27
Another article about Ludington, published in April, 1908, also
reported some interesting information about the sawmill town, as follows: 28
. . . The new sawmill plant at Ludington has never shut down during
the hard times and never missed a payday, paydays occurring every
two weeks, and it is running on an eight-hour plan, with no cut in
wages. The mill seems to have been extremely fortunate in having a
large number of orders, and these largely from railroads.
. . . The Stephensons for two generations have been manufacturers of
lumber, and by their uniform integrity and push, have always made a
success. This company is independent of all lumber organizations and
associations and has unlimited capital. They have been cutting some
60 foot timbers for pile drivers, and it took one day to saw seven
timbers. The forests had to be searched to find the trees necessary, and
out of the seven timbers cut, only two were found suitable.
. . . One thing is very remarkable, and that is that the four years the
writer has been traveling the Kansas City Southern and visiting this
mill, scarcely any changes have taken place. The migratory spirit that
pervades the operatives of mills generally seems to be conspicuously
absent here, where ... men are employed and they are the best.
. . . The streets and houses are kept in the very best sanitary
condition. The hotel, under the management of Mr. Dailey, is one of
the best in the south; that is, in a lumber proposition. Mr. Isaac
Stepenson gives the mill his personal attention, butso familiar are all
the operatives with their respective duties, that this seems
unnecessary. In fact, it is a model plant....
Dr. George Stokes explained in his dissertation that the Ludington
school taught only to the seventh grade, with advanced students attending
high school in Deridder. He added that a former Ludington employee told
him about 1953 that the first experimental dial telephone system in the
United States was installed in th Ludington mills and business buildings in
1913, about the time that the original owners sold out to Long-Bell Lumber
Company, but the writer found no other confirmation for that statement. 28a
Another brief communication probably explained why the Northern
owners sold out in 1913, perhaps because they apparently never became
acclimated to the warm Louisiana summers, as follows: "...All the people
who left here to spend the summer in the North have returned and have
resumed their places as citizens of this busy sawmill city... A goodly number
are former residents of Michigan and Wisconsin and generally spend the hot
summers with the old folks at home..." 29
Although all the key personnel at Ludington were probably always
homesick for their former locations, there were undoubtedly more urgent
reasons to force the owners to sell out to Long-Bell Lumber Company early
in 1913 (not to mention an attractive price). Ludington still had several
thousand acres of virgin timber. Anthony Van Schaick died in 1912, and the
writer believes that Isaac Stephenson died at Ludington about the same
year. 30
It was obvious that Long-Bell wanted the Ludington timberlands more
than the Ludington mill. The firm was soon reorganized as Ludington
Lumber Company, incorporated in Missouri, with R. A. Long as chairman;
F. J. Bannister, president; and R. T. Demsey, secretary, all of Kansas City. In
July, 1913, Long-Bell promptly transferred Ludington timberlands to its
other subsidiary companies, as follows: 1,973 acres to Calcasieu Long Leaf
Lumber Company, Lake Charles, for $98,438; 4,875 acres to Hudson River
Lumber Company, Deridder, for $243,750; 4,312 acres to King-Ryder
Lumber Company of Bon Ami for $215,625; and 3,000 acres to Longville
Lumber Company of Longville for $157,000. 31
With four large subsidiary sawmills in the same vicinity, it is certainly
a marvel that Long-Bell did not shut down the Ludington sawmill and
dismantle the buildings and machinery. However, Ludington was probably
its most modern and well-maintained location. By 1913, the new owner had
already acquired title to about a half-million acres of timberlands between
Deridder and Lake Charles, and perhaps with good forest management, the
Long-Bell mills were apt to survive on second growth timber for the next ten
or fifteen years. Certainly, some of the "perks" at the Ludington mill were
discontinued after 1913, as the Ludington mill operation was streamlined to
conform to Long-Bell practices at its other mills. There was also a general
shutdown of all the Western Louisian sawmills and some very unpleastant
labor violence in August, 1911, as the Brotherhood of Timber Workers
sought to organize the mills, but that effort generally came to naught.
The writer found some discrepancy about exactly how long the
Ludington Lumber Company remained in operation. Stokes noted in his
dissertation that Ludington ceased all operations, probably because of
exhausted timberlands, in 1926. Mr. Elvin Holliday of Deridder informed
the writer that the Ludington mill cut out in 1928; also that it was dismantled
in 1929, because his father bought some of the lumber and timbers for a
business he was building. Whatever the year, operations would certainly
have ceased with arrival of the Wall Street crash of October, 1929, which
soon plunged retail lumber prices well beneath production costs.
It was particularly sad when a once prosperous town ceased to exist
and returned to ghost town status in the forest. It is even sadder when its
history is lost, and people cease to recognize the town's name, even though
some persons still alive in 1995 were born in Ludington. Other than the
telephone system, Ludington had many other 'firsts,' - double-cutting band
saws, paydays two weeks apart, in currency instead of mill checks, and
painted houses and sewers for its employees. The remaining mill towns in
Louisiana and East Texas could only view Ludington with "green-eyed"
envy.
FOOTNOTES:
- Vols. 2, pp. 118-126, 283; and Vol. 11, pp. 272-277, Beauregard Parish Conveyances.
- Ibid., Vol. 2, pp. 122-126; also Manuscript Census Returns of 1910, Ludington, Calcasieu
Parish, Louisiana, Ward 6; also Dr. George Stokes, "Lumbering in Southwest Louisiana," Ph. D.
dissertation, Louisiana State University, 1954, p. 174.
- Ibid., Vol. 1, pp. 235-236.
- Ibid., Vol. 2, p. 89, Beauregard Parish Conveyances.
- Kansas City Southern Sawmill Circular No. 52-A, Kansas City, February 1, 1901; "Mills on the
Kansas City Southern," Beaumont Journal, Oct. 10, 1904; "Lumber Mills of Louisiana," Southern
Industrial and Lumber Review (Sept. 15, 1906), p. 29.
- "The Van Schaick Co. of Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Nov. 19, 1905, p. 8
- "Ludington News," Beaumont Enterprise, June 25, 1905. These articles of 1905 spelled
Ludington with two 'd's.'
- "Ludington News," Beaumont Enterprise, Feb. 13, 1905, p. 4.
- "Deridder-Another Good Town," Beaumont Enterprise, Nov. 19, 1904.
- "Luddington and Van Schaick," Beaumont Enterprise, May 7, 1905, p. 13.
- Ibid.
- "Ludington News," Beaumont Enterprise, June 25, 1905.
- Compiled from the Ludington articles cited in footnotes; also Manuscript Census Return of
1910, 12 pages of Ludington, Calcasieu Parish.
- "Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Nov. 5, 1905, p. 15
- "The Van Schaick Co. of Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Nov. 19, 1905, p. 8.
- "Ludington News," Beaumont Enterprise, Nov. 26, 1905, p. 9.
- Ibid., Feb. 16, 1906,p. 15.
- "Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Feb. 4, 1906, p. 20.
- "Town of Ludington," Ibid., Aug. 19, 1906, p. 14.
- "Deridder Has Grand Fourth," Beaumont Enterprise, July 7, 1907, p. 5.
- "Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Feb. 2, 1908, p. 16.
- "Ludington, La.," Ibid., Oct. 13, 1907, p. 16.
- "Ludington, La.," Ibid., Oct. 20, 1907, p. 16.
- Ibid.
- Ibid., "Ludington, La.," Nov. 3, 1907, p. 18.
- Ibid., "Lucington Locals," Nov. 23, 1907.
- Ibid., "Ludington Notes," Dec. 1, 1907, p.18
- "Mill at Ludington," Beaumont Enterprise, April 4, 1908, p. 3.
- A. Stokes, "Lumbering in Southwest Louisiana," Ph. D. disser., LSU, 1954, p. 174.
- "Ludington, La.," Beaumont Enterprise, Oct. 20, 1907, p. 16.
- Vol. 7, pages 155-163, Beauregard Parish Conveyances.
- Vol. 15, pp. 477-484, July 7-13, 1913, Beauregard Parish Conveyances.
- Stokes, "Lumbering in Southwest Louisiana," p. 174; "Thirty Mills on Strike," Beaumont Journal, Aug. 24, 1911.

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