Stories About the Life and Times of the Dupont Family
by: Donelda Louise Dupont
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StoryofGusDupont
Chapter 6 
Logging is not an easy life.

Chapters: 
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Logging had been the way of life in Mattawa for many years but it was by no means an easy life.
 
log jam 1863

History has some horrifying stories to tell of the shanty men and their experiences of those times. The local hospital was built because of the many logging accidents that had left so many men injured and maimed. The local nuns had started the hospital to care for these poor souls...There had to be a better, easier and kinder way of life.

Logging was the most important winter activity in the area from the latter part of the 18th century to the early 1900's. In the spring when melting ice from tributaries throughout the upper reaches of the watershed greatly increased water levels, massive numbers of logs were floated downstream to the mills .

Wood was the great staple of Canadian trade for much of the 19th century. Founded upon European demand, the timber trade brought investment and immigration to eastern Canada; it fostered economic development; and it transformed the regional environment far more radically than the earlier exploitation of fish and fur. It encouraged the building of towns and villages, the opening of roads, and exploration. It also contributed at times to economic instability. Business cycle  swings produced wide fluctuations in the demand for, and the price of, wood; and weather conditions, commercial uncertainties and imperfect market intelligence magnified these difficulties. 

Wood entered 19th-century trade in many forms. Large masts, cut for the Royal Navy from the finest trees of the mixed forest that swept through the Maritimes and the St Lawrence Valley, were the most valuable commercial product of British North American forests, which also produced shingles, barrel staves, box shooks and, later, spoolwood for textile factories. But sawn lumber and square timber were the major wood staples. Lumber, the product of sawmills , was prepared mostly as "deals" (rough pieces of wood at least 12´ long, 7´ wide and 2½´ thick, or about 366 x 18 x 6 cm), planks and boards. Square timber, known in the Maritimes as "ton timber," were baulks or "sticks" of wood hewn square with axes and shipped to England, where they were often resawn. Strict specifications governed the market; a "wane" (bevel) and slight taper were allowed, but they varied according to the stick's dimensions and changed with time. Waste was quite considerable: 25-30% of each tree was discarded. 

The naval mast trade, always limited by its specialized and high quality requirements, shifted from the Saint John to the St Lawrence Valley early in the 19th century when contractors sought oak, as well as pine, from the deciduous forests of the southern Great Lakes area. The square timber industry developed rapidly to meet the enormous demand from Britain, which was at war with Napoleonic France and was also undergoing industrialization. The transatlantic timber trade, fostered by economic and strategic imperatives, was quickly sheltered by timber duties when Napoleon's 1806 Continental Blockade of Britain's traditional supply areas in northern Europe drove domestic prices up some 300% in 2 years. On average, 9000 loads (almost 1.5 m³ each) of colonial timber entered Britain annually between 1802 and 1805; in 1807 the total was 27,000, 2 years later 90,000, over 500,000 in 1840 and 750,000 in 1846. Thereafter imports fluctuated for 20 years around 600,000 loads and then declined until WWI. 

The pattern of the lumber trade is less easily summarized, since international markets were widely separated. Beginning in the 1830s, increasing quantities of lumber were shipped to Britain; there was a growing trade between the Canadas and the US, and many mixed cargoes of lumber and small wood products left the Maritimes for the West Indies. During the period of reciprocity with the US and the construction of railways and canals, the importance of the American market grew; 400 million board feet of BNA lumber passed through Oswego, NY, 1864-66, and wood exports to the US from the PROVINCE OF CANADA were worth almost $7 million in 1866-67. But until the 1880s combined lumber and timber sales to Britain were more valuable than those to the US. Not until 1905, with imports of some $18 million, did the US account for more than half of Canadian forest-product exports. 

Although small quantities of birch, white oak, rock elm, ash, basswood and butternut were squared, although some cedar was cut, and although spruce and hemlock lumber increased in importance after mid-century, PINE was the industry's major species. Its exploitation rapidly encompassed a wide area. By 1810 only the fringes of New Brunswick's pine forests had been cut, and the Ottawa-Gatineau confluence marked the inland limit of lumbering in BNA. By 1835 barely a tributary of the Miramichi, Saint John and Ottawa rivers remained unexploited. By 1850 much of the pine had been harvested from the more accessible reaches of these river systems, and trade from many small ports and coastal inlets had ceased. Railways broke the industry's dependence on water courses for the movement of wood to markets and opened the back-country of lakes Ontario and Erie to the trade. Exports from the Peterborough area increased fivefold when the railway arrived in 1854; between 1851 and 1861, Simcoe County rose from insignificance to pre-eminence among lumber producers in Canada West. Mills proliferated along railways pushing northward into the Canadian shield

This onslaught on the forest only slowly came under government control. Initially BNA forests were ineffectively protected by the imperial "broad arrow" system, implemented in N America early in the 18th century to reserve valuable trees for the Royal Navy. As demand rose after 1806, crown reserves were violated; surveyors appointed to protect them profited from the administrative confusion. In 1824 in New Brunswick and 1826 in Upper and Lower Canada, a coherent regulatory system was established. In BNA provinces except Nova Scotia, the sale of licences conferred a temporary right to cut trees and returned revenue to the government. Periodic amendments attempted to limit the illegal cutting and trespassing which vexed administrators intent on maximizing revenues, but the basic principles of crown ownership and leasehold tenure of the resource were upheld. In marked contrast to the American pattern, present-day Canadian (with the exception of NS) forest law - shaped by the interplay of tradition, self-interest, and the limitations of a vast and hostile environment - has preserved something of the 18th-century conservative idea of how the state should serve the common good. 

Logging was essentially a winter occupation, beginning with the first snowfall. In the fall, loggers would build camps called shanty camps. (A shanty is a winter lumber camp. Early camps were simple, made of notched pine or spruce logs with a flat roof of rough shingles or bark and poles. By the 1840s larger "camboose" shanties could accommodate over 40 men in their 110 or 140 m2; the central fire with its large open chimney for light and ventilation did not yield to the stove until late in the century. Men slept fully clothed in bunk beds of hay or boughs; cooking facilities, the foreman's office, barrels of wash water and grindstones occupied much of the remaining space. 

They would  clear rough roads for hauling hay and provisions and for moving logs or timber to the streams. The industry depended heavily on the muscles of men and beasts. Trees were normally felled with various types of timber axes (until the 1870s, when the crosscut saw became more common), and "bucked" to stick length with a crosscut saw. Timber was squared by axemen: the log was "lined" along 2 sides to mark the dimensions of the desired square; "scorers" then removed the unwanted outside wood in rough slabs, and the sides of the log were rough-hewn and then smooth-hewn with broadaxes. The log was rolled through 90° and lined, scored and hewn on the remaining 2 sides of the square. Before transportation, the ends of the stick were trimmed to a pyramid shape. 

A snow road eased the hauling of logs and baulks to riverbanks by oxen, and later by horses. With the coming of the thaw, the timber drive began. Men equipped with "jam dogs" (iron hooks), canthooks or peavey's, and often immersed in chilly water, engaged in the hectic and dangerous task of floating the cut out on the freshet. When more open water was reached, or where falls and rapids could be bypassed by timber slides,(Timber Slide, water-filled chute or runway built to carry rafts of timber around rapids and falls; similar devices for individual pieces of wood were called "flumes." Ruggles Wright of Hull claimed to have built the first Canadian slide in 1829. Built of wood and designed to spread the river's fall over a kilometre or more, slides quickened the drive, lessened chances of a jam and reduced damage. Most common in the Ottawa Valley, slides were originally private toll-levying facilities. By 1846 public slides were operating as far up the Ottawa as Lac Coulonge, and by 1870 the Canadian government maintained many public slides to facilitate the Ottawa valley timber trade. In 1860 the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) rode down a timber slide during his visit to British North America.) logs and timber were assembled into rafts to continue downstream to mills or to river-mouth booms (especially at Québec, Saint John and the mouth of the Miramichi R), where they were shipped abroad. As steampower replaced water power in sawmills, it increased mill capacity and extended the season of mill operation but did not break the pattern of winter logging. Although railways reduced the industry's dependence on rivers to transport timber to the mills, their initial importance was in carrying lumber from mill to market; by the end of the century, specialized logging railways still made only a slight impact on eastern Canadian operations. 

Before 1825 most BNA timber was produced by small-scale independent operators, many of them farmers who were attracted to the work in their off-season. Good timber was readily available and little capital was required to enter the trade. By 1850, however, as lumbering moved into more remote areas, expenditure on the clearing of boulder-strewn streams became necessary, regulation of the crown domain tightened, more capital was invested and the declining trade intensified competition among operators, and entrepreneurs were seeking to make their positions secure. Large, diversifed, integrated operations emerged, although smaller enterprises persisted on the settlement frontiers. Generally the skilled, the well capitalized and the well connected dominated the trade by acquiring licences, employing lumbering gangs under contract, building large, efficient sawmills and operating their own vessels or railways. For example, in the 1840s Joseph CUNARD and 3 branch houses of the great Scottish firm of Pollok, Gilmour and Co virtually controlled the trade of northeastern New Brunswick by these means. Subsidiaries of the latter concern were also important in the St Lawrence Valley. William PRICE, "le père du Saguenay," was said to employ 1000 men in the 1830s; by 1842 he had sawmills at Chicoutimi and a steam tug to take ships up from the St Lawrence. In the Ottawa country, J.R. BOOTH's firm produced over 30 million board feet of pine lumber in the 1870s; in the next decade it built the Canada Atlantic Ry to bring out the cut from its Parry Sound licences. In Canada West the firms of Mossom Boyd and D.D. Calvin experienced similarly spectacular successes. The early diffuse and informal trade gave way to an industry dominated by relatively few well-capitalized family firms and partnerships. Thus, the chronic instability of the early trade was somewhat reduced. In the 20th century, as pulp and paper production grew, capital requirements increased further. Many firms amalgamated, and joint-stock financing began to shape the patterns of corporate dominance that mark the forest industry today. 

Technological changes accompanied developments; long-persistent patterns and practices of forest exploitation yielded to mechanization after 1875, but generally innovations gained acceptance more slowly in the forests of eastern Canada than in the rugged, newly opened areas of BC. Working and living conditions improved as city industries and West Coast logging camps competed for labour. But for all these changes and even as the locus of Canadian wood production shifted westward with the opening of the Panama Canal, and the exhaustion of eastern forests, the eastern lumber industry retained much of its traditional and seasonal character into the 1930s. 

Although James COOK'S men had cut logs for masts on Vancouver I in 1778, lumbering in BC did not begin seriously until the 1850s. The early industry exploited the huge trees close to the tidewater (mainly DOUGLAS FIR and red cedar) and served markets scattered around the Pacific and as distant as S Africa. With the completion of the CPR in the 1880s, this "cargo trade" was supplemented by trade to the east. Soon, BC wood was popular worldwide. Lumbering on the rugged West Coast required considerable adaptation of eastern techniques: 3 times as many oxen were required; snowroads were impossible in the milder coastal climate, so skid roads had to be built of logs; cuts were made higher on the huge trunks, and a springboard was required for each of the 2 axemen to stand on; and heavy, double-bitted axes were developed. 

Manual logging techniques were used until about 1912; horses had replaced bulls by the 1890s and were used until the 1920s. By far the most important innovation was the steam-powered donkey engine, introduced about 1897 from the US, which could drag logs up to 150 m. Another innovation was the "high lead system," in which a line high over the skids pulled or lifted the log over obstacles. In 1910 BC production surpassed Québec's; in 1917 it surpassed the production of every other province; and by the late 1920s BC was producing half of Canada's annual cut of timber. As in the East, railways as well as waterways brought timber to mills or ports; now both use primarily trucks. Forsetry  is still a vital part of Canada's export base. 

Author GRAEME WYNN 

We must consider that when Gus wrote his last will and testament, later in his life that he would refer to himself as a prospector....not a logger, a trapper or a farmer.(Gus Dupont's Last Will and Testament)

It's still the early 1900's and the Dupont family is barely eking out a living, for the times are tough.

It was around this time that Bruno would be taken for his first hair cut. The popular fashion for the time was for very young boys to have their hair long but it was decided that it was time for the curls to come off. So when there were a few extra pennies in the purse, Gus was instructed to take Bruno to the barbers.

Now just as today, the barbershop in a small community was the central meeting place and as expected, there were a few fellows there when they arrived. One of Gus's friends was about to head over to the tavern and Gus wanted to go with him, so it was decided Bruno was a big enough boy to handle this job on his own. Gus told the barber, "Give the lad any cut he wants" and he went off to the tavern. When it was Bruno's turn he looked at the barber and simple asked for the same style of cut as the barber. Unfortunately the man was bald as a billiard ball.
Bruno loved his new look, Gus was very much amused but Melvina was not very impressed with the hair cut at all.barbershop 1910
 
 

The First World war had come and gone leaving few if any scars on the Dupont family but just around the corner in 1918 was the great Spanish flu epidemic which killed more than 40 million people world wide.. It has been said that not a family was left untouched by this scourge and the Dupont family was no exception. Bruno would become so violently ill that that the doctor feared he would not make it through the night, so the priest was immediately called. However when the sun came up the next morning  the angle of death had not placed his merciless grip on Bruno but on the younger son...Andrew.
grim reaper during 1918 Spanish Flu pandemicflu virus
(Stanford University Web site)
angel
Once again Melvina would be letting go of one of her so loved reasons for living.

The Dupont children were all enrolled in the French Catholic school were they would get their instructions from the  Roman Catholic Nuns. (Canadian Federation of the Sister's of St. Joseph)

Clementine  recalled the day when, as she referred to them as Government men had come to their class and told the sisters, "that from this day forward the official language spoken  would only be English."
( Quebecers, the Roman Catholic Church and the Manitoba School Question: A Chronology).There was much controversy in Canada surrounding the separate schools and the French-English language at the time. Not that much has changed today, almost 100 years later... This must have created quite the challenge, as French was the mother tongue used in the average household at the time.

The Dupont family would eventually have a connection to  an American and the American Auto Industry. This would give Joe an opportunity for work in the USA's auto industry. Joe was a grown man now and would head off elsewhere to seek his fortune.
 


....please read further

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Background Music:
Great Canadian Tune Book
The Log Drivers' Waltz
Wade Hemsworth (1916-2002)
Used with permission

If you should ask any girl from the parish around
What pleases her most from her head to her toes
She'll say, "I'm not sure that it's business of yours
But I do like to waltz with a log driver".

   Chorus
   For he goes birling down a-down the white water
   That's where the log driver learns to step lightly
   It's birling down, a-down white water
   A log driver's waltz pleases girls completely.

When the drive's nearly over, I like to go down
To see all the lads while they work on the river
I know that come evening they'll be in the town
And we all want to waltz with a log driver.

To please both my parents I've had to give way
And dance with the doctors and merchants and lawyers
Their manners are fine but their feet are of clay
For there's none with the style of a log driver.

I've had my chances with all sorts of men
But none is so fine as my lad on the river
So when the drive's over, if he asks me again
I think I will marry my log driver.



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