DaveBrt
1st Lieutenant
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2010
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
As I noted, the Chief Engineer requested Bragg to detail men to cut the trees along the line of the road and detail men to run the sawmills that were sitting idle nearby. The demand for lumber was so great during the war that most projects had to locate the wood in the wild and arrange for its cutting and sawing. This included shipbuilding, warehouse construction, fortifications -- everything needed wood and it was not available on demand. At least two railroads were extended to reach sawmills to supply the needs.90,000 cross ties, 8 and a half feet by 7 inches by at least 8 inches is a lot of board footage. Were there lumber yards where this amount could be gotten, or would it require harvesting and milling upon placement of the order?
Lubliner.
Many annual reports of railroads mention the number of ties on hand for the next year's requirements,frequently many tens of thousands. Ties for new construction were not cut until the grading for the specific area had been completed -- sometimes an entire year before the iron would be laid. Contracts for new ties appear to have been three to five years long and were for major suppliers and for the individual who just needed to earn a little cash (perhaps to get by while waiting for the first crop on a new farm or to cover for a failed crop).I know there was a lumber mill near Nickajack near the Tennessee border and Chattanooga. The New Orleans shipbuilders were also contracting out for timber cutting and delivery. So the absolute amount of wood overall is staggering, considering the wide uses mentioned above. Seeing pictures of places such as Brandy Station in Virginia I was wondering if there were ever any ties kept in stockpiles somewhere when these delays occurred. In the article @DaveBrt wrote about the Blue Mountain Railroad, he says the owners explained that without iron the work was not worth the cost. So during the hold ups while contracts were being renegotiated it may still have been feasible to send men into the forests for tree-cutting. This way a stockpile could have been set aside for future use.
Lubliner.
Contract Bid advertisements for various needs are an interesting read. In the Washington Evening Star these opportunities are scattered through a page every day. Most times they were for 3 years, and with a quota to meet each of the three years, and the amount to be paid, plus the penalties for inability to meet demands. The mention you made of contract deadlines made me first think of southern/northern contracts before the war; whether the bids were ever open giving the south opportunity to supply the north.Many annual reports of railroads mention the number of ties on hand for the next year's requirements,frequently many tens of thousands. Ties for new construction were not cut until the grading for the specific area had been completed -- sometimes an entire year before the iron would be laid. Contracts for new ties appear to have been three to five years long and were for major suppliers and for the individual who just needed to earn a little cash (perhaps to get by while waiting for the first crop on a new farm or to cover for a failed crop).