Encyclopedia Dubuque
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.
KNAPP, STOUT AND COMPANY
KNAPP, STOUT AND COMPANY. One of the largest lumber companies in the world. A successor in 1854 to the KNAPP-TAINTER LUMBER COMPANY, the firm experienced a rapid expansion between 1866 and 1869 with three mills opened in Wisconsin. The involvement of Henry L. STOUT led to the renaming of Knapp-Tainter to Knapp-Stout by 1854. (1)
The mill at Menomonie eventually became the company's largest warehouse. Employing seven hundred workers in 1866, the Menomonie mill became the company headquarters in 1886 and employed two thousand workers by 1898. (2) In Dubuque, lumberyards belonging to the company stretched over twenty acres and employed an estimated one hundred fifty men.
In 1869 the company made its first expansion into shipping by purchasing the steamboat" Anna Girdon" to transport cut timber. This allowed the company to make considerable savings which it reinvested in more land and equipment improvements which helped it survive tough competition in the LUMBER INDUSTRY. (3) Between 1871 and 1881 the company's shipping fleet expanded to eight ships. (4)
By 1878 when it was incorporated at Knapp, Stout and Company, the firm was considered the largest manufacturer of lumber in the United States and was thought to be the largest lumber corporation in the world. (5)
By 1881 the company had branch offices in Dubuque, Downsville, Waubeck, Reed's Landing and St. Louis. There were small mills at Rice Lake and Prairie Farm. (6) In 1882 a merger with the Red Cedar Improvement and Log Driving Company increased the capital stock of the company. (7) In 1887 between 1,200 to 1,500 men were employed in the timber forests, mills and yards of the company. The average pay roll was $2,000 daily. (8)
On January 6, 1890 Knapp-Stout sold its seventh street mill in Dubuque to two of its former salesmen, C. J. Lesure and J. J. Van Villet. (9) This mill was developed into the LESURE LUMBER COMPANY. (10)
A disastrous fire in June 1894, led to the loss of approximately fourteen million feet of lumber. The liquidation of the company timberlands in Wisconsin led to the November 1900, announcement that the Dubuque branch would be closed. (11) The company intended on centralizing itself in St. Louis. This site, however, was sold in 1903 for one million dollars.(12)
In 1901, the company (using the same name) was incorporated by C. W. Chapman and Frank D. STOUT with a capitalization of $100,000. (13) In 1908 the company was sold to SPAHN AND ROSE LUMBER COMPANY. (14)
The 1861 through 1890-91 Dubuque City Directory stated that this business was to be found at the northeast corner of 8th and Washington.
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Source:
1. Knapp-Stout Company Founders. Online: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~widunn/knapp-stout-founders.htm
2. Hudson, David; Bergman, Marvin; Horton, Loren. The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa. Iowa City: The University of Iowa Press, 2008. p. 497
3. Knapp-Stout & Co. Company Photo Archive. Online: http://www.uwstout.edu/lib/archives/photoarch.cfm
4. Hudson, p. 496
5. Holand, H. R. "The Knapp-Stout & Co. Lumber Company." The Wisconsin Magazine of History, Vol. 3, No. 4, Jun., 1920. p. 470 Online: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4630265
6. Kerker, Renae. "The Sage of the Sawdust: The Life of Henry L. Stout," Unpublished thesis, December 1, 1979, p. 3
7. Kerker, p. 4
8. The Industries of Dubuque: Her Relations as a Trade Center, Dubuque: J. M. Elster and Company, Publishers, 1887, p. 63
9. Kerker, p. 4
10. Ibid.
11. Kerker, p. 5
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.