| When you stop to chat with local
townsfolk and shop owners you find that Onalaska has
quite a colorful history. The area was first settled
in 1840, and was a farming area until the arrival
of the Carlisle Company.
With the sawmill, Onalaska then became a boom town
and was even larger than the nearby county seat of
Livingston. The town had two hotels, a movie theater,
a large park, a hospital, a large downtown which included
many stores, a cold storage plant, its own electrical
plant, a bank, a railroad depot, and a large general
store where you could purchase almost anything.
The town's primary claim to fame was the largest
sawmill in Texas. However, when the forest was depleted
in the mid 1920's the sawmill closed. The loggers
moved on and Onalaska shrank to a "sleepy little
East Texas village". There are restored pictures
of the original community hanging in the city hall
council meeting room which can be seen Monday though
Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The lumber industry and its need for sawmills started
the boom times. At one
time Onalaska had three sawmills; two pine and one hardwood.
At this time the Onalaska population was greater than
that of Livingston and the Onalaska sawmill owned by
Carlisle-Pennel Lumber Company was believed to be the
largest in Texas.
The Carlisle-Pennel sawmill had nine boilers and
two cutting bank saws. The electricity for the entire
community and the mill was supplied by two 150-kilowatt
machines by direct current.
The log pond covered thirty acres across a small
creek. It was also supplied by the overflow of two
artesian wells. These artesian wells supplied the
community's water system that flowed into a large
wooden tank in the rear of the main office building.
The drying kiln had eight rooms and was supplied
by steam from the sawmill. The planer mill had twelve
machines of different types and a long shipping runway
for loading railroad cars. There were three sheds
that housed the dry planed lumber.
The Carlisle company sold the Onalaska sawmill in
1912 to Jim West from Houston for four million dollars
with the stipulation that Mr. Jackson continue managing.
Mr. Jackson retired in 1917, but the mill continued
to operate until 1924, and the town settled down into
a long slumber from which she was only recently wakened
by the kiss of the water from Lake Livingston.
William Carlisle sent L.O.. Jackson to Polk County,
Texas in 1903 and, with the help of Judge J.E. Hill
and R.T. Stone, he purchased thousands of acres of
land between the selected mill site and Trinity, Groveton,
Corrigan and east of Livingston. The price paid for
the land was approximately $5 per acre. This included
land and mineral rights.
Mr. Jackson moved to Onalaska, Texas in 1904 to begin
construction of the mill. He brought with him from
Arkansas about 30 men, among whom were Oscar Agee,
Phate Bailey, Like Gore John Hayes, Dan Moore and
J.H. Wright, many of whose descendants are still members
of the community today.
The town was divided by Main
Street, which was all white quarters. A creek separated
the whites and the blacks. The blacks had about 40 houses
and the whites had about 35 houses west of Main Street
and 35 houses east of Main Street. The Mexican's quarters
were still further east of the white quarters. It has
been told that the Mexican quarters were known as the
red quarters because the houses were all painted red.
The married employees at the sawmill all had houses
furnished to them for $5.00 a month including lights
and water. The average pay was $1.50 a day. On payday
the employees were paid in cash through the Onalaska
Exchange Bank.
The railroad depot at Onalaska was located on Main
Street about three-fourths of a mile south of the
company store and had a sidewalk all the way to the
store.
There was always lots of good clean fun, such as
on the Fourth of July and Juneteenth
when the lumber company furnished all the meat for
the barbecues held in the two block square park. In
the fall of the year carnivals, merry-go-rounds, and
other amusement park rides would act up in the park.
Others also remember singsongs that were held there
from time to time.
Onalaska had two baseball teams, one white and one
black. The company furnished the uniforms and the
equipment. The teams would practice after work and
play their games on Sunday afternoons and on holidays.
The electricity for the mill and community was supplied
by two 150 kilowatt machines. These artisan wells
also supplied the water for the community as it flowed
into a large wooden tank at the rear of the main office
building.
The L.O. Jackson, C.J. Rogan House, the large office
building, and one of the hotels were located on Front
Street, which ran east and west. The office building
covered an entire block with living quarters upstairs
for office and store personnel. The downstairs level
housed the Onalaska Exchange Bank and vault, the bookkeeping
and general offices, C. J. Rogan's office and the
doctor's office.
 |
The town had two hotels. One hotel had twenty-five
rooms and large dining rooms. The other hotel had
thirteen rooms and a dining room. Located between
the hotels was a hospital that had six beds and a
large operating room. The company store sold just
about everything the people of the community ever
needed. The store had ten departments: drugs; tobacco;
groceries; cosmetics; jewelry; ladies' dresses; 'piece
goods'; men's clothing; shoes, hardware; furniture
and Caskets. The Masonic Lodge was located over the
store. The Post Office was located in the store also,
but the Postal authorities requested it be moved to
the boiler house across from the main offices. That
way, people could have access to postal facilities
twenty-four hours a day. The original post office
was located about one mile north of the community.
Across from Front Street to the south was the large
boiler that furnished steam heat to the offices, the
store, and the homes of L. 0. Jackson and C. J. Rogan.
Also across the street was a twenty ton ice plant
that furnished ice for all the mill's needs as well
as ice delivery to the homes. Ice was priced at ten
cents for fifty pounds. The plant had underground
lines that ran up to the company story to the twelve
walk-in coolers that were kept at around thirty degrees.
The coolers were in the meat market, and had four
train car loads of meat shipped from Kansas each
month.
The married employees of the
Carlisle-Pennel Lumber Company all had homes furnished
to them by the company for $5 per month, which included
lights and water. The salary was $300 per month, an
amount unheard of back in those days. On pay days, the
employees were paid in cash at the Onalaska Exchange
Bank.
There were other businesses located in Onalaska that
were not company-owned or connected. A.S. Smith and
his son Jerry bought a tract of land south of Bushy
Creek and put in a feed and grocery store. Dick Alston,
Sr. had charge of the blacksmith business and also
did in-the-woods repairing, mule shoeing, saw repairs
and other repairs pertaining to farm and lumber machinery.
Wiley and Keenan Peebles owned and operated the tin
shop and put gutters on all the houses on Front Street
and the hotels. The hotel gutters were at least forty
feet off the ground and thirty feet in the rear. This
was considered to be quite a feat.
Robert Thompson had the first and only auto garage
located on the west side of Main Street. There was
also a two-room schoolhouse on the site where the
Baptist Church is now. The school had three teachers.
Professor J.H. Taylor was the principal. There were
also two doctors, a bakery, and a three-chair barber
shop.
Mr. Carlisle donated a plat of land south of Onalaska
to the Methodist Church; they built a church on the
exact plot of land that was deeded to them, with the
understanding that Mr.Jackson would be on their board
of directors, so that the property would be protected
from any misuse and would not be sold for any other
purpose. This raised quite a row, since W. Jackson
was senior deacon in the Baptist Church at the same
time.
The railroad depot at Onalaska was located on Main
Street about three-fourths of a mile south of the
company store. There was a wooden walk from the depot
all the way to the store. On special days, like the
Fourth of July and County Fair Day in Livingston,
the railroad would run excursions to Livingston in
three flat cars which had built-in bench seats on
either side of the cars. Large cans of ice water were
supplied in the center of each car. The trips would
begin at six a.m. and returned at twelve midnight.
There were other kinds of entertainment depending
on the time of the year. There was a picture show
owned by W.P. Christman. In front of the picture show
was a park, two blocks by two blocks in size, facing
Main Street. In the fall of the year carnivals, merry-go-rounds
and other amusement park rides would be set up in
the park. |