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Sawmill
town Bessmay
gave its life
to fire
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
Saturday
August 21,
1999.
In
1901 the newly
chartered
Kirby Lumber
Company
planned a new
industrial
complex to
become the
"brightest
star in its
galaxy of
sawmills;"
also to be
known as "Mill
R" in its
alphabet soup
of mill
identities.
The new town,
2 miles north
of Buna, was
named Bessmay,
after Kirby’s
only child.
Construction
began early in
1902, and by
Sept. 1903,
the town of
Bessmay was
finished. The
sawmill
contained 2
double-cutting
band saws and
a 52-gang saw,
that could
slice 240,000
feet of lumber
in ten hours,
or double that
amount if a
night shift
were operated.
The
powerhouse
contained 2
huge steam
engines, one
of 1,000 hp.
The other
engine of 400
hp. turned 2
dynamos,
generating 300
kilowatts of
electric
power. The
planning mill
had 10
machines it
it, all geared
to electric
motors, for
Bessmay was
designed to be
the nearest
thing to an
"all-electric"
sawmill of its
age.
The
town also had
a large mill
office,
commissary,
post office,
physician’s
office, and
hotel. The 200
residences of
Bessmay were
segregated
into white and
black sections
to conform to
the living
patterns of
that age. W.
H. Preston was
the first mill
superintendent.
In
1907 the
Bessmay
sawmill cut 58
million feet
of lumber,
which probably
was its banner
year. By 1918,
production was
down to 46.5
million feet,
and its 716
mill employees
were paid a
total of
$452,000 in
wages.
Bessmay
was built on
swampy land,
and after a
rain,
employees had
to wear rubber
boots to work
because of the
muddy streets.
Nevertheless
many men spent
a lifetime
working there.
Dave Bird, who
began as band
sawyer in
1905, was
promoted to
plant
superintendent
in 1929, and
filled that
post until
1942. Joe
Marriott, who
began as chief
carpenter in
1903, still
held that
title in Nov.
1935, the
month that
Beaumont
Enterprise
published 4
articles about
Bessmay, as
follows:
"...People
in Bessmay 25
years ago were
much different
than today.
There was no
law here then,
every man
making his own
law. The
superintendent
wore a gun,
and many
residents
also.... Boys
who stayed at
the hotel shot
at box cars on
the siding...
Once they saw
something
running out...
it was whiskey
dripping from
a bullet hole
in a
barrel..."
By
1935 some
Bessmay
streets were
blacktopped.
Houses had
electricity
and running
water, and
employees paid
a nominal
monthly rent.
Company-filled
medicine cost
10 cents for
one
prescription.
The grammar
school had 5
teachers, but
older students
were bused to
Buna schools.
In
1935 A. W.
Dainwood was
assistant
superintendent,
who later
replaced Dave
Bird. R. E.
Vandeventer
was sawmill
foreman; Jack
Hatch was
planer
foreman, and
Nolyar Hatch
was dry kiln
foreman.
Jack
Owens was the
last plant
superintendent
when the
sawmill burned
on May 10,
1950. The 350
plant
employees were
transferred to
Silsbee and
elsewhere, and
Bessmay, where
1,200 people
lived in 1948,
gradually
became a ghost
town.
If
you should
encounter Mrs.
Marjorie
Bridges of
Beaumont, Mrs.
Guy Richardson
of Nederland,
or Mrs.
Marjorie Haire
of Buna,
either could
tell you what
teenage life
was like in
old Bessmay.
Fortunately
for the
sawmill
historian, the
microfilm of
Beaumont
Enterprise
contains a
long series of
wonderful
Bessmay
articles,
beginning in
1905 and
ending in
1950.
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