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Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Company photograph album, approximately 1948-1956

Overview of the Collection

Collector
Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co
Title
Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Company photograph album
Dates
approximately 1948-1956 (inclusive)
Quantity
24 black and white photographic prints in 1 album (1 folder)
Collection Number
PH0064
Summary
Photograph of the Pulp Mill's alcohol extraction plant processes
Repository
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Entire collection can be viewed on the Libraries' Digital Collections website. Permission of Visual Materials curator is required to view originals. Contact Special Collections for more information.

Request at UW

Languages
English
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Historical Note

The Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co. forest products complex had its beginnings in 1925 when Pacific Coast Paper Mills constructed a small tissue manufacturing plant on five acres of Bellingham, Washington’s downtown waterfront tideland landfill.

To help supply Pacific Coast Paper Mill’s need for a local supply of pulp, the San Juan Pulp Manufacturing Co. was founded in 1926 by Ossian Anderson, a local businessman, in the landfill adjacent to the Pacific Coast Paper Mill.

Formed in 1929, the Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. was a conglomerate of pulp, logging, lumber, and railroad companies in northwestern Washington. It included the Pacific Coast Paper Mills and the San Juan Pulp Manufacturing Co.,with Ossian Anderson becoming the first president. Despite the Depression, during the 1930s, Puget Sound Pulp & Timber’s former San Juan pulp mill enjoyed success.

In 1937, Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. began a construction project which rebuilt and re-equipped its original 1926 plant. World War II introduced significant expansion to the company's Bellingham operations with the construction of an alcohol extraction plant on the mill’s site. Built by the national Defense Plant Corporation, this plant produced ethyl alcohol from wood sugars found in the sulfite liquor left over from the pulping process. It was the first United States pulp mill to manufacture alcohol from wood-pulp wastes during World War II with the alcohol then converted into synthetic rubber used in the war effort.

Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. eventually purchased the successful plant from the government. A booming economy following World War II brought further improvement to the Bellingham pulp mill. Construction projects expanded the plant's capacity and it was converted from unbleached to bleached sulphide pulp production, and introduced the production of paperboard, industrial alcohol and other by-products from previously discarded materials. These by-product items were called Lignosite (used in cement, adhesives and vanillin), Amerex (used in tanning processes) and Q-Broxin (a mud additive used in drilling oil wells). Lignosite production began in 1947 and the production of the other two quickly followed.

Building on the alcohol plant’s success, in 1947, Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. established a chemical laboratory at the Bellingham plant to research uses for pulp byproducts. This lab eventually became one of the largest of its type in the world, attracting a group of distinguished scientists from both America and Europe. Chemical products developed in the Bellingham lab included vanilla flavoring, animal feeds, adhesives, tanning agents, pharmaceuticals, fuel pellets, solvents and drilling mud thinners.

The plant also adopted automated labor systems, at the time considered the most modern method for conserving raw material and saving time.

After eighteen years, the renovation of the plant was finished in 1955, increasing production plant from 152,875 tons in 1954 to 161,448 tons in 1956. Year after year, by a series of technical changes and improvements, the pulp-making capacity the daily average output of bleached sulphide pulp went from 371 tons in 1950 to 449 tons in 1955. Moreover, by 1956, net sales of the company of alcohol, Lignosite and paperboard totaled $24,141,502, well over half million more than in 1955.

On July 2, 1963, Puget Sound Pulp & Timber Co. was merged into the Georgia-Pacific Corporation. Georgia-Pacific continued to operate the pulp mill in Bellingham until its closing in May 2001.

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Content Description

The collection was a promotional album made by the Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co. providing visual documentation and descriptions of the various activities of the plant as it appeared in 1956.

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Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available

View the digital version of the collection

Restrictions on Use

Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for details.

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Donor: Rushton, Washington State Department of Ecology, 1986.

Processing Note

Processed by: Arlene G. Cohen, 2018

The album was deteriorated and had acidic glues so the material was removed from the album.

Bibliography

Puget Sound Pulp and Timber. Making Puget Pulp: History of Wood Pulp Making, Pictorial Tour of the Puget Pulp Plant. Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co., Bellingham. 1957. Puget Sound Pulp and Timber. Making Puget Pulp: History of Wood Pulp Making, Pictorial Tour of the Puget Pulp Plant. Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co., Bellingham. 1948.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

 

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Subject Terms

  • Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
  • Wood-pulp--Refining--Photographs

Other Creators

  • Corporate Names

    • Puget Sound Pulp and Timber Co.--Photographs (photographer)
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