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BEAUMONT'S
FABULOUS WIESS
BROTHERS:
BUSINESS
LEADERS OF
EARLY BEAUMONT
(HISTORY OF
THE RELIANCE
LUMBER CO.)
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
November 9,
1980.
If the reader
cares to read
in depth about
these
remarkable
families,
consult text
and footnotes
of W. T.
Block, "From
Cotton Bales
to Black Gold:
A History of
The Pioneer
Wiess Families
of Southeast
Texas," TEXAS
GULF
HISTORICAL AND
BIOGRAPHICAL
RECORD, VIII
(Nov., 1972),
39-61.
Wiess
Bluff on the
Neches River,
fifteen miles
north of
Beaumont,
Texas, could
be anyone of a
hundred
beautiful
piney woods
sites, where
towering
timber
monarchs rim
the banks of
the stream,
creating a
myriad of
shady nooks
beneath. Less
visible is its
historical
significance
which, in
three
generations,
linked an
immigrant's
rustic cabin
to the
founding of
giant Humble
Oil and
Refining
Company (now
Exxon) in
1917. The same
spot also
provided early
Beaumont with
three
brothers,
Mark, William,
and Valentine
Wiess, who
became an
indispensable
trio among the
top ten lumber
barons of the
"sawdust
city."
Their
father, Simon
Wiess, became
a Neches River
cotton broker
at Wiess
Bluff, Jasper
County, in
December,
1839, after
having
operated
unsuccessful
stores at
Nacogdoches,
Beaumont, and
Port Neches
between 1836
and 1839. One
religious
account of
Beaumont
credits Wiess
with having
been the first
member of the
Jewish faith
to reside in
Jefferson
County. While
that statement
is probably
true, Wiess
never
practiced his
religion after
his arrival in
Texas and
apparently
guaranteed the
demise of his
faith when he
married
Margaret
Sturrock, a
Scotch
Presbyterian.
The twin sons,
Mark and
William, were
born at Wiess
Bluff in
October, 1842,
followed by
Valentine in
July, 1845. A
daughter,
Pauline
Coffin, was
the firstborn
child,
followed by
two other
sons, Captain
Napoleon Wiess
in 1839 and
Massena Wiess,
born in 1849.
Simon
Wiess was a
shrewd cotton
trader and
merchant, and
while yet in
their teens,
the business
acumen of his
sons was being
honed to
microscopic
keenness over
the counter of
the Wiess
store. In
1862, the four
older brothers
enlisted in
cavalry
Company A of
Spaight's
Battalion, of
the
Confederate
Army, and the
brothers
fought at a
number of
Louisiana
battles,
particularly
the Battles of
Calcasieu
Pass, Fordoche
Bayou, and
Bayou
Bourbeau. Each
survived the
war, and a
collection of
their Civil
War letters is
available at
the Rosenberg
Library of
Galveston.
Pauline
Coffin, the
oldest,
outlived all
of her
brothers and
resided ninety
of her 93 year
lifespan at
one residence
at Wiess
Bluff, dying
there in 1930.
Her fondest
memory was of
an occasion
when Gen. Sam
Houston stayed
overnight
there while he
was en route
by steamboat
to Sabine
Pass. Capt. N.
Wiess lived
all of his
short life of
33 years at
Wiess Bluff
and died there
in 1872. At
various times
after 1866, he
owned and
operated two
Neches River
cotton
steamboats,
the "Albert
Gallatin" and
"James L.
Graham."
Massena, the
youngest,
spent his
career in
business in
Round Rock and
Sour Lake,
Texas, and
died at
Beaumont in
1921.
During
the
Reconstruction
years, Mark,
William, and
Valentine
pursued
different
business
patterns until
they united in
ownership of
the Reliance
Lumber Company
in 1881. From
1866 to 1875,
Captain
William Wiess
was also in
the cotton
export
business, as
owner and
master of the
sternwheelers
"Alamo" and
"Adrianne,"
which sailed
both the
Neches and
Sabine Rivers.
He also owned
a
half-interest
with his twin
brother Mark
in the store
of W. Wiess
and Company of
Beaumont.
Mark
Wiess was the
first of the
brothers to
settle and
enter business
in Beaumont,
founding a
general
mercantile
store there in
1866 in
partnership
with David R.
Wingate. In
1867, his twin
William bought
out Wingate's
interest.
After their
father's death
in 1868, Val
and Massena
Wiess operated
the family
store at Wiess
Bluff for the
next two
years. Yet it
appears that
both commuted
back and forth
to Beaumont,
for Massena
Wiess was
treasurer of
Jefferson
County in
1869. He
resigned in
1870 to move
to Round Rock.
Mark was the
only brother
who showed an
early interest
in sawmilling.
In April,
1870, he and
Harry Potter
bought the old
Otto Ruff
sawmill on
Brake's Bayou,
which they
reorganized in
1878 as the
Reliance
Lumber
Company. Ruff
had bought the
small circular
mill from
Steadman
Foundry in
Aurora,
Indiana, in
1859, and
shipped it via
steamboat and
schooner to
Beaumont,
where it
became the
third steam
industry in
the thriving
frontier
hamlet. During
the 1860s, the
mill had a
spasmodic
history, being
operated
intermittently
for short
intervals by
A. J. Ward,
Goldsmith and
Regan, and
Dan. Greene.
Apparently,
Mark Wiess
became
disillusioned
with
sawmilling,
for in 1873 he
sold his
interest in
the Wiess and
Potter Mill to
James F. Ward
and James
Dalton. His
reasoning for
selling
stemmed from
the relatively
small output
of the mills
of that era, a
daily cut of
about 5,000
feet being
about average.
Mark Wiess
recognized
that the
production
bottleneck was
the
friction-feed
carriage,
which depended
on the weight
of the log to
feed it into
the circular
saw, a crude
method by any
comparison,
and any
improvement in
circular or
band saws
would
accomplish
nothing until
maximum
efficiency of
the log
carriage could
be perfected.
About 1876, he
invented and
patented a
device, known
as "shotgun
feed," in
which a
cylinder,
energized by
steam, moved
the carriage
back and forth
on the carrige
track. The
innovation
doubled
production and
revolutionized
sawmilling
overnight.
In
1874 Valentine
Wiess founded
V. Wiess and
Company at
Beaumont
which, within
a decade,
became
Beaumont's
largest
merchandising
and insurance
firm,
representing
13 insurance
underwriters.
Next door to
it, he began
Beaumont's
first private
bank which
operated as a
branch of the
mercantile
business. In
1889 he was
instrumental
in founding
and became the
first
president of
First National
Bank, which is
still in
business
although the
name is
altered.
During
the 1870s,
William and
Val Wiess
joined William
and W. P. H.
McFaddin and
Dr. O.M. Kyle
in founding
the 60,000
acre Beaumont
Pasture
Company (known
also as the
"Mashed-O"
Ranch), which
operated a
herd of 10,000
cattle on the
60,000 acres
of the open
prairie south
of Beaumont.
They also
owned a large
ranch and a
few thousand
steers in
Greer County.
In 1900, these
partners also
entered the
canal
business, when
they built a
pumping plant
and system of
25 miles of
canals,
beginning
where Dupont
Chemical is
currently
located. In
1905 they
organized the
McFaddin-Wiess-Kyle
Rice Milling
Company. In
Jan., 1901, it
was upon land
of the
McFaddin-Wiess-Kyle
Trust Company
that Capt.
Anthony Lucas
bored the
successful
Spindletop
gusher, thus
launching the
Wiess brothers
into the oil
business as
well. The
brothers were
silent
partners in
the ranching
and canal
activities,
which were
actively run
by the
McFaddin
family.
Also
during the
1870s, each of
the brothers
had the
misfortune to
lose a young
wife still in
her twenties,
two of them,
Lou E. and
Mary Wiess,
being
daughters of a
pioneer
Beaumont
merchant,
William Perry
Herring. At
later dates,
each of them
remarried.
Mark Wiess
reared six
children to
adulthood;
William Wiess,
four children;
and Valentine
reared two
children.
In
1878, Mark
Wiess teamed
up with J. F.
Ward, H. W.
Potter, and W.
P. H. McFaddin
to found the
Reliance
Lumber
Company, using
as its nucleus
the land and
facilities on
Brake's Bayou
of the old
Wiess and
Potter mill.
They
immediately
went heavily
into debt to
buy a $6,000
double-circular
sawmilll,
boilers,
engine, and
related
equipment from
E.P. Allis and
Company in
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, and
all of it
financed by a
$10,300 loan
from Val
Wiess' bank.
From its
beginning, the
Reliance mill
had a cutting
capacity of
50,000 feet
daily,
unbelievable
lumber
production for
that era, and
due solely to
its "shotgun
feed' steam
carriage. For
a time it was
the only
sawmill in the
world that was
so equipped.
In
1881, William
and Valentine
Wiess bought
out Ward and
McFaddin's
interests in
the company,
but Val Wiess'
interests in
sawmilling
were strictly
financial
thereafter
(except that
Val Wiess also
organized the
area lumbermen
into an
association
for their
mutual
protection).
For the next
twenty years,
William Wiess
served as
president and
production
genius, while
Mark Wies
became sales
manager and
Beaumont Board
of Trade's
emissary to
the rest of
the world. For
years, he
maintained
sales offices
in such remote
places as
London, and he
was
continually on
the road to
the Northern
states,
Europe, and
Latin America.
Today,
it is hard to
visualize the
extent of
national
stature
enjoyed by
Beaumont's
early timber
barons. In
addition to
the Wiess
brothers,
members of the
Long and
Carroll
families, W.
A. Fletcher,
John W. Keith,
J. N. Gilbert
and J. F. Ward
were
well-known in
every lummber
market, and
long
biographies of
them survive
in several
lumber trade
journals. Mark
Wiess was gone
for eight
months of
every year,
most of it in
the
mid-western
and eastern
states. In
every respect,
he was
Beaumont's
"one man
chamber of
commerce" when
actually no
chamber
existed, and
the Galveston
"News" took
note of large
write-ups
about him in
such distant
cities as
Chicago and
Mexico City.
The "News"
dubbed him as
the "Bishop of
Beaumont,"
because he
never ceased
to extol the
virtues of
"sawdust
city."
In
February,
1888, a "News"
correspondent
toured the
confines of
the Reliance
sawmill's
"whirl of
machinery,"
and upon
exiting, he
"was right
glad to
inventory as
many arms and
legs at the
end as when he
started."
By
then, the
Reliance
facilities had
grown to an
annual cutting
capacity of
about
20,000,000
feet annually,
while its
planing mill
could process
75,000 feet
daily and its
dry kilns,
20,000 feet
daily. One of
its other
factories
processed wood
lathes, fence
pickets,
barrel staves,
and moulding,
while another
manufactured
windows,
doors,
ballasters,
stair rails,
pulpits,
office desks,
and tables.
The Reliance
Lumber Company
continued to
expand until
1902, when the
Wiess brothers
sold out to J.
H. Kirby, and
by then its
double-cutting
band saws were
slicing up
125,000 feet
per day.
In
September,
1891, the
sawmill landed
the largest
lumber order
ever recorded
in Beaumont
and perhaps
anywhere else
in the South.
Mark Wiess
signed a
contract for
100,000,000
board feet of
lumber with
the Omaha and
Kansas Central
Railroad. The
footage was
considerably
beyond the
company's
ability to
produce, and
for two years,
the Reliance
mill bought up
the entire
output of a
number of East
Texas mills.
During
the 1890s, the
Wiess brothers
owned 90,000
acres of
timber lands,
but already
they could
foresee the
end of
Beaumont's
lumber era and
the rafting of
logs down the
Neches River.
By 1890, for
economy's
sake, it was
already
preferable in
most instances
to erect
sawmills along
the line of
the Sabine and
East Texas
Railroad, in
the vicinity
of the log
supply. And
when John H.
Kirby offered
them a
favorable sale
price in 1902,
they sold out.
Another factor
was the
Spindletop
discovery a
year earlier,
which had
already caused
the brothers'
business
interests to
focus more and
more on the
oil-producing
industry.
Under Kirby,
the Reliance
mills
continued to
operate until
1920, when
they were
dismantled and
moved inland
to the piney
woods region.
Perhaps
Valentine
Wiess'
greatest
contribution
to Beaumont
lumbering, in
addition to
financing,
came with his
founding in
1883 of the
East Texas and
Louisiana
Lumbermen's
Association,
of which group
he served as
president and
maintained its
headquarters
on the second
floor of his
bank.
Throughout the
last century,
the sawmillers
were plagued
by perennial
box car
shortages and
unfavorable
freight rates,
and Wiess
banded them
together for
their mutual
protection.
One result was
the
development of
a flourishing
coastwise
trade, wherein
lumber was
barged to
Sabine Pass
and from
there,
trans-shipped
by schooner to
all of the
world's
markets. Much
of the Wiess
lumber
correspondence
is preserved
in the
associations's
"Letterbook
for
1884-1886."
Although
the brothers
were
part-owners of
the Spindletop
gusher site,
they showed no
enthusiasm
over the oil
discovery.
They had each
earned a
fortune
already and
were
comfortably
situated in
fine mansions
scattered
along
"Lumbermen's
Row" in
Beaumont. Like
others of
their economic
status, they
looked with a
certain
disdain on the
swarm of
boomers and
roughnecks,
lease traders,
and hangers-on
of every hue
who surged
back and forth
between the
depot, the
hotels, and
the oil field.
The brothers
knew that
significant,
and perhaps
unwanted,
changes would
occur that
might lower
the quality of
life in the
quiet but
industrious
"sawmill
city."
William
Wiess remained
perhaps the
most aloof, he
and his family
spending the
first week
after January
10, 1901,
cruising about
aboard their
yacht on the
Neches River.
But gradually,
he too was
caught up in
the quest for
oil, and by
August, 1901,
he was a
member of a
committee
appointed to
draft a
uniform code
of fire
prevention and
safety
regulations
for the
renowned oil
field.
For
twenty years
Valentine
Wiess had
owned the
largest
business firm
in Beaumont,
V. Wiess and
Company
consisting of
a grocery
firm, a dry
goods firm,
hardware and
farm implement
firm, retail
lumber,
banking, and
insurance
firm, and his
payroll had
begun to
compare to
that of the
sawmill. By by
1902, his
interests too
were beginning
to focus on
oil. He soon
became an
early
stockholder of
the J. M.
Guffey
Production
Co.; he
invested in
pipe lines,
and later
teamed up with
W. P. H.
McFaddin to
found the
McFaddin and
Wiess Oil and
Gas Company,
headquartered
at 302 Tevis
Street. In
1913, the year
of his death,
Val Wiess was
the largest
taxpayer on
the city's tax
rolls, having
invested
heavily in
business
property and
in practically
every other
enterprise of
note within
the city. In
1900, he built
the first
five-story
brick building
in Beaumont.
There seems to
be little
doubt that,
when he died,
Val Wiess was
the wealthiest
of the three
brothers,
although all
fiscal papers
have been
removed at
some time in
the past from
his probate
file and were
never
returned. At a
later date,
his daughter
donated Wiess
Park to the
City of
Beaumont.
Mark
Wiess invested
heavily in oil
stock and real
estate as
well. He was
generally
recognized as
the "father of
the deep water
movement" in
Beaumont. In
addition to
his inventions
and "firsts"
in sawmilling,
he also owned
the first
typewriter and
the first ice
company in
Beaumont.
Although many
of his probate
papers are
also missing,
it is apparent
that the last
division of
property to
his heirs was
in excess of
$300,000.
For
one who at
first was the
most aloof,
William Wiess
ended up with
the largest
commitment to
the oil
industry. His
first activity
was a large
investment in
the fledgling
Texas Company
(now Texaco
Inc.). In 1903
he and others
founded the
Paraffine Oil
Company and
brought in the
Batson Prairie
oil field,
pumping about
10,000,000
barrels of oil
from its
depths in 1904
alone.
Ultimately,
William Wiess
became sole
owner of the
Paraffine Oil
and Reliance
Oil companies
and he bought
a
half-interest
in the Ardmore
Oil Company of
Oklahoma,
which brought
in several
fields in that
state after
1908. As his
health began
to fail prior
to his death
in 1914,
William
transferred
the presidency
of these
companies to
his youngest
son, Harry C.
Wiess, who was
a 1910
graduate of
Princeton
University.
To
free
themselves
from the
arbitrary whim
of refiners,
pipe line
operators, and
others, young
Wiess joined
other
independent
producers,
among them
Ross Sterling,
W. S. Farish,
R. L. Blaffer,
W. W. Fondren,
and other old
Spindletop
veterans, in
organizing the
Humble Oil and
Refining
Company in
1917. The
immediate
result was the
building of
the huge
Baytown
refinery,
which is today
a part of the
huge Exxon
Corporation.
Harry Wiess
took both of
his father's
oil companies
and sizeable
oil properties
in both Texas
and Louisiana
into the
formation of
Humble. He
also served as
vice president
of Humble for
many years,
and from 1936
until his
death in 1948,
he served as
its president
and guiding
business
genius.
Mark
Wiess died in
1910, and
William Wiess
died four
years later.
William Wiess'
probate papers
are intact and
show a net
worth of $1
million at the
time of his
death, an era
when lumber
sold for $10 a
thousand feet
and oil at 30
cents a
barrel. The
writer would
wager that the
Mark Wiess
estate was of
equal worth,
and that of
Valentine
Wiess was
probably worth
$2 million.
In
brief, these
are the
amazing annals
of Wiess
Bluff, a site
which
contributed
three of the
founding
fathers of
Beaumont, and
another who
managed the
destinies of a
giant national
corporation.
And all
because their
progenitor,
Simon Wiess,
chose to
abandon the
financial
woes, hates,
and prejudices
of Europe, and
seek a better
life for
himself and
his successors
among the pine
forests of
Southeast
Texas.
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