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Texas | Columns | Bob Bowman's East Texas

Sawyers and Flatheads

by Bob Bowman
Bob Bowman

In the Northwest, they were called lumberjacks, but in East Texas they were called “sawyers” or “flatheads.”

Using crosscut saws, axes and teams of mules and oxen, they felled the timber which fed hundreds of early sawmills and shaped the future of dozens of East Texas towns like Lufkin, Livingston, Orange, and Jasper.

A hardy breed with a broad streak of independence, they were as colorful as they were hard working, and the language they used became a part of East Texas’ heritage.

If a sawyer told you he’d “fight a timber rattler and give it two bites to start,” you knew he was a man to avoid. And if he said he felt “like he had pulled a dull saw all day,” you knew he was tired.

The logging crews which served East Texas’ early sawmills between the early 1800s and the 1920s rarely stayed long in one place, moving instead from county to county, forest to forest, to cut and haul timber.

Some lumber mills moved entire communities, known as “front camps,” around the East Texas woods, carrying with them the settlement’s basic needs.

At Lufkin, Angelina County Lumber Company operated a fleet of boxcar-like buildings mounted on wheels, ready to roll when the latest logging job was finished. The mobile village, named “Acol,” became famous in East Texas for its “wandering post office.”

A railroad logging crew usually worked ahead of the logging crews, putting down new tracks on which trains transported the loggers, their buildings, and machinery. When the logging was job, the tracks were yanked up and moved to another forest.

The tracks were usually made of iron, but before the turn of the century some logging companies fashioned the tracks from saplings growing in the forest. The saplings, however, frequently warped, invariably leading to train wrecks.

Many of the old logging lines led to the creation of shortline railroads in East Texas.

For example, Thomas Lewis Latane Temple’s Southern Pine Lumber Company used a logging line that ran seven miles into the woods east of Diboll to create the Texas South-Eastern Railroad Company in 1900.

After World War II, the T-SE operated a mixed train pulled by a steam locomotive between Diboll and Lufkin. Passengers riding the line sometimes called it the “Tattered, Shattered and Expired” or the “Take it Slow and Easy.”

Another short line railroad, the Angelina and Neches River Railroad, was also founded in 1900 by Angelina County Lumber Company at Keltys, near Lufkin.

Until the chainsaw was invented in the 1940s, logging in East Texas was a hard, dangerous job. Crosscut saws were the principal tool for downing trees and axes were utilized for limbing and other chores.

The chainsaw made logging somewhat easier, but it didn’t become a less labor-intensive practice until mechanized equipment such as scissor-bladed tree fellers, hydraulic loaders, and other modern equipment arrived in the woods.

The work of East Texas’ early sawyers and loggers constitute a unique part of the region’s heritage, and much of their work is depicted in exhibits at the Texas Forestry Museum in Lufkin.



© Bob Bowman February 22 , 2012 Column
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A weekly column syndicated in 109 East Texas newspapers

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