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FOR RELEASE: Monday, May 15, 2006
How One of America's Great Virgin Forests Was Cut Down
Classic history of Arkansas's lumber industry now back in print in paperback
from the University of Arkansas Press.

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| Sawmill: The Story of Cutting the Last Great Virgin Forest East of the Rockies |
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.-After being out of
print for a few years and much in demand on used book Web sites, the University
of Arkansas Press has returned to print Kenneth L. Smith's classic history,
"Sawmill" (paperback $17.95). As the book's
subtitle describes it, the book is nothing less than the "The Story of Cutting
the Last Great Virgin Forest East of the Rockies."
Winner of the Center for Arkansas
Studies' Virginia C. Ledbetter Prize when it was first published in 1986, "Sawmill"
is a history of logging in the Arkansas and Oklahoma Ouachita Mountains from
1900 to 1950, a penetrating study of the lumber industry, and a significant
view of man's interaction with a major forest resource. It is also a social
history in its account of the lumbermen's quest for the last virgin timber and
the effects of its depletion. Kenneth L. Smith interviewed more than three
hundred people to develop this lively history of the cutting of virgin
shortleaf pine forests.
The Caddo River Lumber Company and the
Arkansas mill towns of Rosboro, Glenwood and Forester provided jobs and homes
for many during the brief heyday of the big sawmills. Smith takes a close look
at several important timber companies, and at the personality of T. W.
Rosborough, a man who bought and sold vast tracts of land and had an almost
fatherly concern for both white and black sawmill workers.
The recollections included here provide
insight into a population that lived through the Depression years in isolated
mountain communities where cats were sometimes sold as possum meat, and where
men enjoyed weekend "sip and sniff" poker parties. The book is richly
illustrated with 100 period photographs.
Kenneth L. Smith is the author of "The
Buffalo River Country" and "Illinois River." In 1967 he was named Arkansas
Conservationist of the Year.
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Contact:
Thomas Lavoie,
director of marketing and sales University
of Arkansas Press (479)
575-6657 tlavoie@uark.edu
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