The lumberjacks who felled California’s Giant Redwoods

A famous series of photographs came out during 1915, depicting a number of lumberjacks working on the giant redwoods of Humboldt County, California. This was the time when tree logging was at its peak.

The photos that were taken are still a part of the Library Special Collections in the Humboldt State University. The series of pictures, taken by A.W. Ericson, highlights the years from 1880 up until the 1920s.

 

Redwood National and State Parks

In the year of 1850, the redwood forest covered more than two million acres of the coast of California. The northern part of the area was originally occupied by the Native Americans.

This place attracted several lumbermen, and a minor gold rush brought others to the region.

That old-growth redwood forest

When the gold began to dry up, the men began to harvest the giant trees for the booming development in San Francisco and other locations on the west coast.

After several decades of there being no restrictions on clear-cut logging, serious efforts in conservation started.

Lumberjacks seen working on the giant redwoods

It’s estimated that up to 96% of the redwoods were logged. Now, 45% of the redwoods that are left are found in the Redwood Nations and the State Parks. The parks are protecting 38,982 acres of old forest.

It’s almost equally branched between federal 19,640 acres and the state 19,342 acres management.

Old-growth redwood forest

The Redwoods have survived along the northern coast of California for around 20 million years and are linked to tree species that lived 160 million years ago. The tallest trees reach heights of around 350 feet (107 meters). The Redwoods are able to get a diameter of 24 feet (7 meters) and can weigh up to 1.6 million pounds.

These enormous trees can live to 2,000 years old and have been on the planet for around 240 million years. Although they were once thriving throughout much of the Northern Hemisphere, today redwoods can be only found located on the coast of central California through to southern Oregon.

Related Post

They don’t live more than 50 miles inland, and are commonly seen in long belts instead of small groves.

 

 

Redwood National and State Parks

 

Redwood National and State Parks during the 1915 era

 

Redwood National and State Parks during the 1915 era

 

Redwood National and State Parks during the 1915 era

 

Redwood National and State Parks during the 1915 era

These trees are the largest of living things and stem from ancient times, and are linked with the thought that they were present on earth at the same time the dinosaurs were.

They were once found just about worldwide, their natural range is currently restricted to the foggy coastal region of Northern California.

Love old places then read this article from us: Once a booming gold town of the Wild West, now is an eerie town of ghosts

There is a strip located in the Sierra Nevada mountains, and a small group in a remote valley located in China. These are the only forests left of a tree line that at one time spanned the earth.