Description
Book SynopsisIn Up-Coast, award-winning author Richard A. Rajala offers the first comprehensive history of the forest industry on British Columbia's central and north coast. He integrates social, political, and environmental themes to depict the relationship of coastal people and communities to the forest from the late 19th century to the present. The account begins with the emergence of a small-scale industry tied to the needs of salmon canneries and early settlements, and traces the development of a diverse structure involving sawmills, tie and pole producers, and hand loggers struggling to profit from participation in domestic and foreign markets. But from the early 20th century on, government policies favoured the interests of giant pulp-and-paper firms such as Pacific Mills at Ocean Falls. A turn to sustained-yield forestry after World War II promoted further concentration of ownership, a pattern that saw Columbia Cellulose capture the Skeena and Nass watersheds to meet the fibre needs of its
Trade ReviewUp-Coast is an important work which deserves to be widely read in British Columbia. Not only does it provide an immense amount of material on an understudied region, it also makes significant points about the pattern of 20th-century resource development and the impact of the postwar boom on the province. BC Studies No. 154
Table of ContentsPreface; Introduction; Chapter 1 - Shallow Roots: Early Forest Industrialization, 1880-1914; Chapter 2 - The Spruce Drive: World War 1 and the Forest Economy; Chapter 3 - The Twenties: Pacific Mills Take Control; Chapter 4 - From Slump to Boom: Depression, War and Changing Patterns in Froest Exploitation; Chapter 5 - "No Camp Large or Small Will Be Missed": The IWA and the Loggers' Navy, 1935-70; Chapter 6 - "Era of Error": Sustained Yield and the Dynamics of Development, 1945-70; Chapter 7 - Winding Down: Up-Coast Forests and Communities After the Boom; Glossary of Acronyms and Abbreviations; Select Bibliography.