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Kirby Lumber Company Records: Boxes 1-100

COLLECTION INFORMATION TABLE OF CONTENTS
Dates:
Size:
Acquisition: Gift,
Access: Open for research
Processed by:
  • Creator Sketch
  • Scope and Content Note
  • Location of Record
  • Inventory
  • Boxes 1-100
  • Boxes 101 - 200
  • Boxes 201 - 300
  • Boxes 301 - 400
  • Boxes 401 - 466
  • Letterbooks and Ledgers
  • CREATOR SKETCH

     John Henry Kirby ca. 1925.

    The Kirby Lumber Corporation was organized in 1901. Its founder, John Henry Kirby, was already a well-known lumberman and timber buyer with large interests in Southeast Texas and the growing city of Houston. At its peak, the Kirby Lumber Corporation operated some seventeen sawmills and a similar number of logging camps, cutting the timber from more than 900,000 acres of virgin pineland. The Kirby company was easily the largest in the entire south. With palatial headquarters in Houston, Kirby presided over a vast empire. He was an important political figure and held offices in both Texas and the federal governments. He was also a leader in organizing the southern Pine Association and frequently spoke for the industry on national questions. During the Great Depression the company fell into financial difficulty and its control passed into the hands of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Company which continues to own and operate it. John Henry Kirby continued as president of the enterprise until his death in 1940. The inactive papers of the Kirby Lumber Corporation were deposited in the Forest History Archives in the Stephen F. Austin State University Library in 1971 through the courtesy of Thomas Orth and J. B. Webster. It is a large comprehensive collection dealing with all phases of the company's activities, numbering some 466 boxes, 1 bundle, and 179 ledgers.

    SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

    LOCATION OF RECORD

    [Forest History--Kirby Lumber Company]

    INVENTORY

    Box 1: 1886-1899

    Corres. with U.S. Circuit Court, Eastern District of Texas
    Corres. With First National Bank of Beaumont
    Corres. With land agents
    Corres. With The Texas Pine Land Association
    Corres. With law offices
    Corres. With lumber companies
    Corres. With Treasury Department, Office of the Comptroller of Currency
    Corres. With real estate brokers
    Corres. With House of Representatives, 26th Legislature
    General correspondence

    Box 2: 1887-1899

    Corres. With law offices
    Corres. With A. B. Doucette, County Surveyor of Hardin County
    Corres. With city officials of Beaumont, Texas
    Corres. With brokers and real estate agents
    Corres. With US Circuit Court, Eastern District of Texas
    Corres. With the Planters & Mechanics National Bank
    Corres. With Waco & Sabine Pass Railway Company Corres. With W. T. Durbin, Republican National Committee
    Corres. With Department of Agriculture, Insurance, Statistics, & History. Geological Survey of Texas
    General correspondence

    Box 3: 1896, 1901-1904, 1908

    Box 4: 1899-1903

    Box 5: 1901-1904

    Box 6: 1901-1905

    Box 7: 1901, 1904-1905

    Box 8: 1902

    Box 9: 1902-1904

    Box 10: 1902, 1906-1909

    Box 11: 1902-1908

    Box 12: 1902-1908

    Box 13: 1902-1910

    Box 14: 1902; 1906-1908

    Box 15: 1902-1906; 1908-1914-

    Box 16: 1902, 1905-1906, 1908-19O9

    Box 17: 1902, 1910-1911, 1914-1915

    Box 18: 1902-1903, 1906-1907, 1912-1915

    Box 19: 1902-1903; 1909-1910

    Box 20: 1902-1906, 1912-1919

    Box 21: 1902;-1912-1916

    Box 22: 1903

    Box 23: 1903-1904

    Box 24: 1903-1904

    Box-25: 1903-1904

    Box 26: 1903-1904

    Box 27: 1903-1904

    Box 28: 1903-1904

    Box 29: 1903-1904

    Box 30: 1903-1904

    Box 31: 1903-1905

    Box 32: 1903-1905

    Box 33: 1903-1905

    Box 34: 1903, 1905-1907, 1909, 1915-1916

    Box 35: 1903-1905

    Box 36: 1903, 1906-1907, 1909-1913, 1915-1920

    Box 37: 1903, 1906-1908, 1916-1920

    Box 38: 1903-1905, 1907-1909

    Box 39: 1903-1907, 1909-1918

    Box 40: 1903-1918

    Box 41: 1903-1919

    Box 42: 1903-1919

    Box 43: 1903-1919

    Box 44: 1904

    Box 45: 1904

    Box 46: 1904

    Box 47: 1904

    Box 48: 1904-1905

    Box 49: 1904-1905

    Box 50: 1904-1905

    Box 51: 1904-1905

    Box 52: 1904-1905

    Box 53: 1904-1906

    Box 54: 1904-1906

    Box 55: 1904-1906, 1908

    Box 56: 1904 & 1907

    Box 57: 1904-1905, 1907

    Box 58: 1904-1908

    Box 59: 1904-1905, 1907-1903

    Box 60: 1904-1909

    Box 61: 1904-1906, 1910, 1912-1913

    Box 63: 1904, 1910-1915

    Box 64: 1904-1907, 1909-1916

    Box 65: 1904, 1911

    Box 66: 1904-1909, 1919-1924

    Box 67: 1904-1913, 1918-1919

    Box 68: 1904-1907, 1909-1914, 1916-1919

    Box 69: 1904-1906, 1909-1915, 1920

    Box 70: 1905

    Box 71: 1905

    Box 72: 1905

    Box 73: 1905-1906

    Box 74: 1905-1906

    Box 75: 1905-1906

    Box 76: 1905-1907

    Box 77: 1905-1907

    Box 78: 1905-1907

    Box 79: 1905-1907

    Box 80: 1905-1907

    Box 81: 1905-1908

    Box 82: 1905-1908

    Box 83: 1905-1909

    Box 84: 1905-1909

    Box 85: 1905-1909

    Box 86: 1905-1909

    Box 87: 1905-1906; 1910; 1912-1917

    Box 88: 1906

    Box 89: 1906-1907

    Box 90: 1906-1907

    Box 91: 1906-1907

    Box 92: 1906-1907

    Box 93: 1906-1907

    Box 94: 1906-1907

    Box 95: 19061907

    Box 96: 1906-1907, 1909, 1911

    Box 97: 1906-1907; 1909-1910

    Box 98: 1906-1908

    Box 99: 1906-1908

    Box 100: 1906-1909

    Last Revised: 

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