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Log boom

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Barrier across a river to contain floating logs
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Log boom moving south on the St. Croix River in Stillwater, Minnesota, 1895.
Log boom on St. Croix River in Maine, aerial photo taken in 1973
Timber marks on a log building in Sweden where they are called flottningsmärke

Alog boom (sometimes called alog fence orlog bag) is a barrier placed in a river, designed to collect and or contain floating logstimbered from nearby forests. The term is also used as a place where logs were collected into booms, as at the mouth of a river. With several firmsdriving on the same stream, it was necessary to direct the logs to their owner's respective booms, with each log identified by its own patentedtimber mark. One of the most well known logbooms was inWilliamsport, Pennsylvania, along the Susquehanna River. The development and completion of that specific log boom in 1851 made Williamsport the "Lumber Capital of the World".[1]

As the logs proceeded downstream, they encountered these booms in a manner that allowedlog drivers to control their progress, eventually guiding them to the river mouth orsawmills. Most importantly, the booms could be towed across lakes, like rafts, or anchored while individual logs awaited their turn to go through the mill. Booms prevented the escape into open waters of these valuableassets.

Log boom foundations were commonly constructed of piles or large stones placed into cribs in a river to form small islands. The booms were themselves large floating logs linked together end to end, like a large floating chain connecting the foundations while strategically guiding the transported logs along their path.

Large blocks of ice commonly threaten booms, pushing free-flowing logs over the structures. Significantly large chunks of ice can even gain enough power so as to break through the boom altogether, freeing the logs and endangering unsuspecting people and wildlife located downstream. Moreover, flooding and the changing of the seasons fluctuate water levels, occasionally causing jams that can extend for miles on end.[2]

Log booms were used in theUnited States andBritish North America throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries. During the largely bloodlessAroostook War that centred on the disputed border betweenMaine andNew Brunswick, hastily built booms proved pricy for local governments. The 1,300-foot-long Aroostook Boom, made of confiscated timber and containing seven piers, cost the state of Maine more than $15,000 to construct. Licensedloggers commonly sent their wood in easily manageable raft units, but illegal lumbermen cunningly sent loose timber, complicating the sorting process and angering officials. Booms often caused friction between the disputing governments; when political tensions intensified, loggers and soldiers targeted enemy booms with arms and explosives.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"The Susquehanna Log Boom, Williamsport, PA, 1890".ExplorePAHistory.com. 2011. RetrievedJuly 21, 2014.
  2. ^Professor Jason Hall, "Rivers, International Conflicts and Cooperation", Rivers in World History lecture, St. Thomas University, 7 May 2015.
  3. ^Richard and Patricia Judd, "Forging an International Economy: The Aroostook War and Its Aftermath", inAroostook: A Century of Logging in Northern Maine (Orono: University of Maine Press, 1988),33-35.

External links

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