W.Va. Timber: From Unending Canopy to Ashes and Back Again

“Just as we came to the hills, we met with a Sycamore…..of a most extraordinary size, it measuring three feet from the ground, forty-five feet round, lacking two inches; and not fifty yards from it was another, thirty-one feet round.”

– George Washington, written while exploring the Great Kanawha River, Nov. 4, 1770

Editor's Note: This story is part of an occasional series from independent producer Jean Snedegar about the timber and forest products industry here in the Mountain State — from seedlings to final products.

Washington’s description of the virgin forest that covered most of West Virginia is one of the few early written accounts we have. We do know that the trees were huge, and that the vast forest canopy was often unbroken, making it dark underneath. But there were exceptions.

Native Americans used fires to make clearings for agriculture, and in the late 1700s and early 1800s, European settlers built iron ore smelters, or furnaces, in the forest, according to Joe McNeel, a forestry professor at West Virginia University.

“They needed iron to make things that would be durable – tools and weapons – iron was a valuable commodity. And so they would go out and find iron nuggets, or iron ore deposits and they would dig holes, dig trenches to acquire the iron ore,” he said. “And so then they would have to smelt it, and so they would build these large iron ore smelters. And they would use coal, but they also used a lot of wood, and so over a long period of time, you had not only people digging huge trenches in the forest, but you also had them cutting the trees down to serve as fuel for the smelters.”

Credit Jean Snedegar
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A timber stand at Stuart Recreation Area, part of the Monongahela National Forest.

At the Stuart Recreation Area outside Elkins, part of the Monongahela National Forest that was last logged more than a hundred years ago, surveyor and local historian Don Teter points to out a large tree.

“This tree is a red oak – very impressive size.  I’m going to stretch the diameter tape around it… We have a diameter of almost 44 inches on this tree,” he said. “Now the diameter is measured, generally speaking, four-and-a-half feet from the ground. It’s called DBH, or Diameter at Breast Height. And that’s the standard measurement that’s used in the timber industry. This is the sort of tree that would excite a logger.”

Within a relatively short walk through the woodland, there are large specimens of red oak, black oak, white oak, scarlett oak, chestnut oak, eastern hemlock, yellow poplar, beech and black cherry.

“Notice this one large stump over here – there’s a red maple growing out of that stump – the stump itself is probably chestnut. Chestnut was one of the most common trees in the Appalachian Forest. It was a very valuable tree,” Teter said. “It tended to grow on dry sites. It grew rapidly. It grew with good form. It was an easy wood to work and it was very durable. And of course, foresters and scientists are still trying to bring the chestnut back from the chestnut blight.”

Industrialization

But Teter said that before the period of major industrialization in the U.S., most of the timber in West Virginia was relatively worthless, except to build your house, or a barn or a fence.

Credit Jean Snedegar
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Don Teter – a surveyor and local historian in Randolph County.

“When the early settlers got to this area, the forest was actually an impediment to them, because there was no market for the logs. The trees would keep the ground from being able to produce the grass that they needed to raise livestock. It would keep the sun from being able to reach the ground for them to grow crops,” he said. “So what they did a lot of times was what was called “hacking” – or “deadening” – where they would girdle the trees. They would cut through the bark on a strip four to eight inches wide near the stump of the tree so that the tree would die. So once the tree died and you didn’t have the thick foliage up there, the sun could make it down through, and gradually over the years they would clear the stumps out of the fields. But they may have for a couple of generations on some of those early farms have been farming amongst those dead trees.”

But, the beginning of an intense period of industrialization in the U.S. meant that West Virginia’s ancient forest was about to disappear.

Credit Photo courtesy of Robert C. Whetsell
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Wildell Lumber Company landing near Wildell, Pocahantas County, circa 1910, showing a log loader picking through a massive log landing and loading railroad log cars.

“Prior to the end of the 19th Century, going into the 20th, we saw this huge swath of the Appalachian Forest cut down,” McNeel said. “And places like Dolly Sods were dramatically affected – I mean the entire ecology was affected – by the harvesting and then the aftermath of burning, and re-burning and then re-burning again.”

Between 1879 and 1920, there was a great logging boom – hundreds of sawmills were in operation across 30 counties. Lumber boom towns flourished. During this period, devastating logging practices and fires removed almost all of the old-growth forest in West Virginia – 30 billion board feet of timber was cut down.  Don Teter says that, in the early days, logging was mostly done along rivers, so companies could float the logs to sawmills.

“But the real decimation of the forest you could say – in a lot of areas – could not occur until you had the logging railroads, when you could punch those railroads up into all the little hollows and you could reach all the trees. And the Shay geared locomotives, the Heisler and the Climax locomotives were critical in that because they could be used on a grade that was much steeper than other railroad engines could use, and you could also have sharper curves,” he said.

“The geared locomotive, the very nature of it was, it was like an all-wheel-drive vehicle today, where every wheel was a driving wheel, so you had the most tractive force. Of course someone who wanted to see an example of this today could go someplace like Cass Scenic Railroad. But tremendous power in those engines and the ability to remove large loads from the woods.”

Credit West Virginia Encyclopedia
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A logging train near Dobbin, W.Va., circa 1910.

It didn’t take long for those early logging operations to cut down most of the trees in a valley.

“Usually a logging railroad grade in one particular area was only there a year or two, maybe five years depending on how large the hollow was and how good the timber was there,” Don Teter said. “And then they would pull the rails there, move them somewhere else.”  

The most valuable lumber that came out of the high-elevation forests of West Virginia was the red spruce. It was used not only to make many expensive musical instruments, but also to build early Wright brothers flying machines.

And cutting down that much forest in a relatively short time had some pretty horrific consequences: fires burned over large areas, including logging boom towns, and once the surrounding forest was cut down, many of those towns disappeared altogether.  In addition, there was devastating soil erosion, flooding and degraded water quality.

National Forests Are Born

So in 1911, Congress passed the Weeks Act, which led to the establishment of many eastern national forests, including the Monongahela National Forest. Today it covers more than 900,000 acres across 10 counties in West Virginia. Soon after, professional foresters started managing forests, to protect wildlife and waterways and to try to maximize the many assets of the forest, especially experimenting with different cutting practices that were sustainable.  

Over the next few decades – the forests across West Virginia began to recover. Today, West Virginia boasts 12 million acres of forest – much of which is harvested on a regular basis.

“When somebody cuts a stand of timber down, it’s not gone forever. If you leave a field just sitting, over time it becomes a forest again. We’ve had a variety of harvests across the state, and yet right now, there’s a huge amount of timberland that exists in the state – almost 80 percent of our state in terms of area is forested,” Joe McNeel said.

“We’ve seen a resurgence in the amount of land supporting forests. We’ve not cut like we used to, so don’t be terrified when you see somebody cutting timber down. Go find out what you can about it. The other thing I would say is our forests are renewable. They do come back. Sometimes even when you don’t want them to. That would be what I would leave you with.” 

This series is made possible with support from the Myles Family Foundation.

W.Va. Timber: Yes, Money Can Grow on Trees

Editor’s Note: This story is part of an occasional series from independent producer Jean Snedegar about the timber and forest products industry here in the Mountain State – from seedlings to final products.

One of the oldest and largest industries in West Virginia is the timber and wood products industry.  West Virginia is rich in this renewable natural resource, but the housing downturn that began 10 years ago hit the industry hard. 

“We are the third most forested state in the United States.  We have 7 million more forested acres in West Virginia than we did 100 years ago.  There are more than 250,000 forest landowners in West Virginia,” said Frank Stewart, Executive Director of the West Virginia Forestry Association – a non-profit that represents those in the forestry and wood products industry.

“There are 30,000 jobs that we provide by our industry and we have over $3 billion in income gross a year in the state.  We are a naturally regenerating, biodegradable industry.”   

And West Virginia’s 12 million acres of forests are among the most biologically diverse in the world.  

Credit Jean Snedegar / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A sign greets visitors to the Fernow Experimental Forest in Tucker County, W.Va.

Fernow Experimental Forest

To see how different species of trees regenerate and thrive, we visited the Fernow Experimental Forest in Tucker County, where, for nearly 70 years foresters have been studying how different management and cutting practices affect the regeneration and growth of trees – from seedlings to saplings to healthy, mature specimens.

“True seedlings are that first plant that forms from the seed – that can be a year old, they can be five years old,” said Melissa Thomas Van Gundy, a research forester with the USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station. “Foresters use the term “sapling” when a tree finally gets out of that little stage, reaches for some sunlight, gets up to be an inch in diameter – taller than five feet, and starting to look like a tree.

“Saplings people think are young, but because sugar maples have such a slow growth habit, they’re shade-tolerant, this could be an 80-year-old tree – just a couple inches wide.  Its strategy to compete with other species is to hang out in the understory and grow at slow levels with little light until it gets its chance.”

Van Gundy says the sapling’s chance will come when the mature black cherry beside it – which doesn’t live as long and has a different strategy. 

“It’s a shade-intolerant species – so when it was a seedling, it shot up for the light as fast as it could, trying to out-complete this sugar maple, and in the long run, they’re both going to win,” she said.

Economic Footprint

Our forests help clean the air and water, provide habitat for wildlife, a place to hunt, fish, hike, bike, camp, or just get-away into the woods and enjoy its beauty.  Timber and forest products also have a huge economic footprint across West Virginia, according to Joe McNeel, Professor of Forestry and former head of the Division of Forestry and Natural Resources at West Virginia University. 

“If you go into any county in West Virginia, there is a forest products company, or a wood yard, or somebody manufacturing something out of wood that they’re making their livelihood from,” he said. “And so, 55 counties, we’ve got companies all over the state in every one of those counties.”

“But Elkins and the surrounding counties are what I would say are the center of the hardwood industry in the state – both in terms of volume and in terms of quality,” said Mark Haddix, wood specialist for Farm Credit of the Virginias. 

“Elkins is the headquarters of the Hardwood Alliance Zone – nine mountain counties that have more than 200 manufacturing, processing and wood-product-related operations.”

Credit Jean Snedegar / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Members of the Hardwood Alliance Zone during a recent meeting.

Changing with the Times

At a recent Hardwood Alliance Zone meeting, Haddix pointed out how wood species go in and out of fashion – how oak, for example, wasn’t valued back in the 1950s and 60s.

“They would leave oaks in the woods – they had no value.  Along came the 80s and we created value out of oak,” he said. “We sold homes because they had oak trim, oak cabinets.  That trend ran until about 2004 or 2005.  At that point in time, everyone was moving to the maples.  And so at the end of the day, even with great forest management, it’s consumer preference.” 

But wages in the timber industry – whether it’s logging or manufacturing – typically are not high, though thousands of families across the state who own woodlands supplement their income by selling timber from time to time – to send a child to college, or buy a new vehicle.   And the timber business is notoriously cyclical, with dramatic peaks and troughs, like the housing crisis, that started in 2007 and 2008.  

But, says, Joe McNeel, it’s still a fairly robust economic driver in the state.

“When things were tough, amazingly the forest products industry were able to find basically products that they could market to specific groups of people,” he said. “From 2007 – 2008 to right now we’ve seen a shift in what companies produce because of the markets they found during those tough times.   They’re mostly industrial-type products:  rail ties, wood mats, pallets, industrial bracing – material like that – have taken a larger portion of the manufacturing sector.”  

Upswing

So what brought it back?

“We’ve had some improvement in housing, but not robust.  It’s been a steady, small climb.  That’s been good.  It’s healthy, sustainable, that’s OK,” Mark Haddix said. “The biggest factor has been the worldwide desire for American hardwoods. They like our hardwoods. We have some economies worldwide who for the first time are gaining a middle class. They’re westernizing just like a lot of other countries have done in the past. They desire the same things that we have.”  

Haddix went on to say that in the past, the U.S. exported lumber for production for a product that was re-imported for our markets.

“Now our customer base, our sawmills, are exporting lumber for domestic markets elsewhere —  2016 was a record export year for hardwood lumber across the nation,” he said. 

More than $10 billion dollars worth.  And West Virginia is aiming to grow its share of that market, and other jobs within the industry. 

Credit Jean Snedegar / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A timber stand at the Fernow Experimental Forest in Tucker County, W.Va.

More to Come

In coming segments of this series, we’ll be looking at the past, present and future of the industry – from forestry practices, to logging, to sawmills, to manufacturing facilities.  But all through the ups and downs of the wood business, families tend to stay involved – generation after generation.   For more than a hundred years – in Pocahontas and Randolph counties, Jim Wilson’s family has been in the lumber business.

“I’m the fifth generation and maybe with one connection I’m the seventh generation, and it’s a saying that if you want to make sure that the offspring continue in the lumber business, that you take some sawdust to the hospital and put it in their hair just after they’re born, and they never get out of the wood business,” he said. “So I suppose that happened to me.”  

Jim has kept that tradition alive with his own son

“I definitely took some down and he’s joined, so he’s the sixth generation that we know for sure,” Wilson said.

This series is made possible with support from the Myles Family Foundation.

Ex-Marine Now On A Very Different Mission

Jake Harriman is a Preston County farm boy who grew up to become a leader in the fight against one of the world’s biggest problems: extreme poverty.…

Jake Harriman is a Preston County farm boy who grew up to become a leader in the fight against one of the world’s biggest problems:  extreme poverty. 

Harriman is one of three leaders in science and business profiled in the public radio documentary Inspiring West Virginians.

In 2008, while studying for an MBA at Stanford Graduate School of Business, 40-year-old Harriman launched Nuru International, an organization which takes a bottom-up approach to help people pull themselves out of poverty in remote areas such as rural Africa. 

Harriman calls Nuru’s approach “the world’s first self-sustainable, self-scalable, integrated development model to fight extreme poverty.” 

Nuru aims to attack hunger, an inability to cope with economic shock, preventable disease and death, and the lack of quality education for children.  

Harriman, who studied at WVU before graduating from the US Naval Academy, was inspired to fight extreme poverty while he was a Marine Platoon Commander in Iraq.  There he saw desperate poverty and what it drove people to do. 

It led him to believe that extreme poverty was a contributing factor to global terrorism and insurgency.  Then and there Harriman determined he would one day do something about it.

She Has One Million Patients

Patrice Harris, MD, a native of Bluefield, WV, is one of the nation’s leading psychiatrists.Harris and 3 other leaders in science and business are…

Patrice Harris, MD, a native of Bluefield, WV,  is one of the nation’s leading psychiatrists.

Harris and 3 other leaders in science and business are featured in the public radio broadcast of Inspiring West Virginians.

Harris is currently the District Health Director for Fulton County, Georgia, which includes the city of Atlanta, and is responsible for more than a million patients.

In this position,  she has overseen the development of some of the best public health facilities in the United States.

Harris serves on the Board of Trustees of the American Medical Association, formerly served on the board of the American Psychiatric Association and is a past President of the Black Psychiatrists of America.

With degrees from West Virginia University in psychology, counseling and medicine, 54-year-old Harris later trained as a child, adolescent and forensic psychiatrist at Emory University in Atlanta. 

As well as having a private psychiatry practice, she has also worked at the Georgia General Assembly on Public Policy and Education programs related to abused and neglected children. 

A Distinguished Alumni of WVU (and fanatical sports fan),  Harris currently serves on the WVU Foundation Board of Directors.

In June, 2015, Harris was named chairman-elect of the American Medical Association Board of Trustees.

Moundsville Native Is A Pioneering Astrobiophysicist

During his distinguished career, theoretical physicist and cosmologist Adrian Melott has been a pioneer in two completely different fields of space…

During his distinguished career, theoretical physicist and cosmologist Adrian Melott has been a pioneer in two completely different fields of space science – and he credits his focus and curiosity in large part to his grandfather who read a lot about science, and his father, a machinist who allowed him “free reign” in a chemistry lab in the family basement.

In the 1980s, the Moundsville, WV native, now 67, was among the first scientists in the world to use supercomputers to envision the large-scale structure of the universe – the intricate, web-like pattern of galaxies and dark matter that later became known as the cosmic web. 

Then, about a decade ago, Melott and a few colleagues launched a whole new field of science which studies the potential affect of gamma ray bursts on the Earth.  Since it involves astronomy, biology and physics, he named this new field astrobiophysics.

A long-time Professor of Physics at the University of Kansas, Adrian Melott did his doctoral work in cosmology under the supervision of one of the fathers of modern cosmology, Dennis Sciama.  Sciama also supervised Professor Stephen Hawking, perhaps the world’s most famous living scientist.

Adrian Melott and 3 other leaders in science and business are featured in the West Virginia Public Radio documentary Inspiring West Virginians.

Clinical Pharmacologist Left Duke to Conduct World-Class Research at WVU

Not many pharmacists do cutting edge research in developing new drugs, and how drugs affect different patients differently.But 53-year-old clinical…

Not many pharmacists do cutting edge research in developing new drugs, and how drugs affect different patients differently.

But 53-year-old clinical pharmacologist Bill Petros of Wheeling, WV studies how cancer drugs react differently from one patient to the next.

For more than a decade Bill Petros led his own research lab at Duke University Cancer Center, one of the top cancer research centers in the United States. 

Then he got a call from West Virginia University, and was thrilled to return home.

Now in his lab at the Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center in Morgantown, Petros develops early drug trails on how smoking affects the way a cancer drug acts in the body, or how body weight affects the way a drug may act, as well as many other factors. 

He’s carrying out world-class research in the new world of personalized medicine – here in West Virginia. 

Petros holds the Mylan Chair in Pharmacology at West Virginia University. He’s also Associate Director for Anti-Cancer Drug Development at the Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center at WVU.

Petros and three other leaders in science and business are featured in the West Virginia Public Radio documentary Inspiring West Virginians.

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