Since early
childhood I have been intrigued with stories of the forests. I remember my
grandparents telling of the huge trees they found in this section when they came to
Arkansas from Georgia in the early 1850's. |
Recently I was told
about a huge tree which was cut in a logging operation in Cleveland county in 1922.
This is perhaps the largest tree ever cut in the county, at least it is the largest I have
heard about. The tree was a cowoak, a species of whiteoak. It was eight feet
in diameter. Four 12-foot logs were cut before reaching the first limb of the
tree. This tree was cut by Wallace Mitchell and Ray Cash, who were employed by the
J. F. McIntyre & Sons Lumber Co., of Pine Bluff. The tree was located about half
way between Gray's Lake and Saline river and almost nine miles north of Kingsland. |
McIntyre & Sons
had a camp at Radway, a mile west of Poole on Saline river. They operated a log tram
road from Radway on the Cotton Belt Railroad. The tram was about 10 miles long and
ran northwest for Radway traveling the route of Saline river. |
For information
concerning the tree I am indebted to Mrs. Helen Goggans, a daughter of Mr. Mitchell.
Mrs. Goggans went to much effort to get these facts for me, even to calling Mr.
Cash at Hendersonville, Tenn., for his version of the felling of this giant oak 54 years
ago. |
This tree presented
quite a problem. Being eight feet across at the base, Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Cash
tackled the job with a nine-foot crosscut saw. They had quite a task in notching the
tree with doublebit axes and this was no little job. Methods and machinery and tools
for handling such an operation 50 years ago and now were quite different. It was
quite a task to cut the tree into 12-foot lengths. Mr. Cash recalls that it took
eight men to get the tree down and cut up. They began early in the morning and it
was four thirty o'clock in the afternoon before the tree was on the ground. |
He also recalls that
Dave Graves and "Dutch" Brown were among those who were engaged with him and Mr.
Mitchell. He also stated that two men worked at either end of the saw and they used
hammers and wedges galore. Messrs Harry and Roscoe McIntyre were also on hand to
assist. |
The first or butt
cut of this giant tree contained 2,700 board feet and the entire tree produced 6,000 board
feet of lumber. It was also a Herculean operation to get brought to the McIntyre
Mill at Pine Bluff. |
Mrs. Goggans tells
me that Larkin Haynie and Wesley Lisemby, who live at Kingsland, were working that area
and know about this huge tree. |
Such historical
facts need to be in print and this is footprints on the sands of time. |