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  2. Simpson Investment Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simpson_Investment_Company

    Simpson was a prominent forest products company in Northern California for much of the 20th century, after first acquiring California timberland in 1945, eventually managing more than 450,000 acres of forest in California, in what was then known as the Redwood Division and is now mostly part of spinoff Green Diamond Resource Company.

  3. Madera Sugar Pine Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madera_Sugar_Pine_Company

    The Madera Sugar Pine Company was a United States lumber company that operated in the Sierra Nevada region of California during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The company distinguished itself through the use of innovative technologies, including the southern Sierra's first log flume and logging railroad, along with the early adoption of the Steam Donkey engine.

  4. Reed family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_family

    The Reed family is an American business family that focuses on owning land. The family currently controls Simpson Investment Company, established 1890, and its spin-off Green Diamond Resource. The family owns 1.37 million acres across California, Washington and Oregon, and is as of 2017 the fifth-largest private landowner in the United States.

  5. Jay Paul Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Paul_Company

    Jay Paul Company is a privately held real estate development company, working primarily in Silicon Valley and based in San Francisco. [1] The company holds more than 11 million square feet of office space in Silicon Valley , and growing.

  6. Sugar Pine Lumber Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugar_Pine_Lumber_Company

    The Sugar Pine Lumber Company became one of the most notable boom-and-bust stories of the 1920s logging industry. After an $8 million investment in 1923, it set records for California's annual lumber cut but quickly exhausted its timber holdings. [1] [3]: 56 By 1933, the company was bankrupt, overwhelmed by debt and high operating costs ...

  7. Logging in the Sierra Nevada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging_in_the_Sierra_Nevada

    Logging creates jobs for about 2,000 private sector workers. For comparison, thirty-three million people visit the National Forests of California for recreation, generating 38,000 outdoor recreation-related jobs. [4] The US Forest Service administers 20 million acres or approximately one-fifth of California's landscape.

  8. A war to halt logging in Northern California reignites. Will ...

    www.aol.com/news/war-halt-logging-northern...

    Activists have fought for decades to stop logging at Jackson State Forest. Now an Indigenous tribe is demanding a say in the fate of their ancestral homeland.

  9. Mendocino Lumber Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mendocino_Lumber_Company

    Union Lumber Company purchased the Mendocino Lumber Company sawmill, railroad, and timberlands in 1906; and again rebuilt the railroad after flood damage in 1907. The buildings of Boyle's logging camp were moved on railway cars when the camp was moved upstream from the Big River confluence with Laguna Creek to the Little North Fork Big River in ...