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A lumber yard sorting table in Falls City, Oregon Frank A. Jagger loads his boat full of lumber at the Albany Lumber District in Albany, New York in the 1870s. A lumber yard is a location where lumber and wood-related products used in construction and/or home improvement projects are processed or stored.
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Timber yard may refer to: Lumber yard in British English variants; Timberyard Records This page was last edited on 2 ...
Convict Lumber Yard is a heritage-listed site at 98 Scott Street, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. Largely an archaeological site, it has been the location of a convict lumber yard, convict stockade and a series of shipping and railway-related buildings.
It may include skidding, on-site processing, and loading of trees or logs onto trucks [1] or skeleton cars. In forestry, the term logging is sometimes used narrowly to describe the logistics of moving wood from the stump to somewhere outside the forest, usually a sawmill or a lumber yard.
The Long-Bell Lumber Company was vertically integrated from the forest to the lumber yard and became the world's largest lumber company in the early 20th century. Long-Bell Lumber Company filed for bankruptcy in 1934, then filed a reorganization plan in the Kansas City federal court in 1935, after Long's death. [2]
The Ryan & Company Lumber Yard (also known as Ryan Bros., Inc.) is a historic site in Apopka, Florida. It is located at 215 East Fifth Street. It is located at 215 East Fifth Street. On February 25, 1993, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places .
The S.J. Mickelsen Hardware Store and Lumber Yard, located at 12580-12582 S. Fort St. in Draper, Utah, dates from 1912. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004; the listing included five contributing buildings .