Research: Sawmill Database

Alpha-Numeric Key: OR-27
Corporate Name: Moore & Swinford
Local Name: Lower Mill, Conway Bayou Mill
Owner Name: James Woods & W. C. Brazee. Alexander Gilmer. Charles H. Moore and E. Swinford
Location: Orange, on the Sabine River, Gilmer-Woods mill on Conway Bayou
County: Orange
Years in Operation: 25 years
Start Year: 1853
End Year: 1877
Decades: 1850-1859,1860-1869,1870-1879
Period of Operation: As early as 1853 to the latter part of the 1870s
Town: Orange
Company Town: 2
Peak Town Size: Unknown
Mill Pond:
Type of Mill: Cypress and pine lumber, crossties
Sawmill Pine Sawmill Hardwood Sawmill Cypress Sawmill
Planer Planer Only Shingle Paper
Plywood Cotton Grist Unknown
Other
Power Source: Steam
Horse Mule Oxen Water
Water Overshot Water Turbine Diesel Unknown
Pit Steam Steam Circular Steam Band
Gas Electricity Other
Maximum Capacity: 3000: 18537000: 186020000: 1870
Capacity Comments: From 3,000 feet initially to 20,000 feet daily of lumber and 25,000 crossties daily.
Produced:
Rough Lumber Planed Lumber Crossties Timbers
Lathe Ceiling Unknown Beading
Flooring Paper Plywood Particle Board
Treated Other
Equipment: Upright sash, circular
Company Tram:
Associated Railroads: Texas & New Orleans
Historicial Development: Woods and Brazee established their mill on Conway Bayou in 1857 with a 3,000-ft daily capacity. The genesis of this mill may have been operating as early as 1853, for W. T. Block wrote in Cotton Bales, Keelboats and Sternwheelers: A History of the Sabine River and Trinity River Cotton Trades, 1837-1900 that by 1853 sawmill operations near Orange included those of John Merriman, R. A. Neyland, R. H. Jackson, Brosser Wood and Co., and the Empire Mills. The mill was not enumerated in the Manuscript Census Returns of 1860. Brazee was killed at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, in 1863, during the Civil War. Alexander Gilmer bought a controlling interest in the mill about 1867; the mill could produce about 7,000 feet daily. It burned down in 1867, and Woods and Gilmer rebuilt it, using the latest in circular saw technology, pushing cutting capacity to 15,000 feet daily. By the later part of the 1870ss, the mill could cut 20,000 feet of lumber daily and 25,000 crossties. The firm of Moore &Swinford bought the mill on Conway Bayou in 1877, and the large Orange Lumber Company plant would be built on this site. With Swinford's purchase of the D. R Wingate interest of the Phoenix mill of the Wingate-Swinford operation 1877 or 1879, the Phoenix was known as the “Upper Mill” while the Conway Bayou mill was the “Lower Mill.”
Research Date: MCJ 03-24-96, JKG 207-95
Prepared By: M. Johnson, J Gerland