Beautifully engraved certificate from the
Thompson & Tucker Lumber Company issued in 1904. This historic document was printed by Clarke & Courts and has an
ornate border around it with a vignette of an old lumber yard scene. This item has the signatures of the Company's President, J. Lewis Thompson and Secretary, J. T. Beall and is over 102 years old.
Certificate Vignette
One of the earliest lumber manufacturers in Texas was the Thompson family. Beginning in 1852 Benjamin F. Thompson and his sons built a small sash sawmill in Northern Rusk County, which supplied local needs and also sold lumber as far west as Dallas and Fr. Worth. His son, John Martin Thompson, expanded and enlarged the mill buying new and improved machinery as it became available.
In 1882 the family moved its operations to Trinity County where they built a large mill at Willard, on the Trinity and Sabine Railroad. In turn his sons developed several new mills and related companies, either in partnerships with members of the family or with other lumbermen. The Thompson family had mills at Willard, Douchette, Grayburg, New Willard, and Trinity, with headquarters at Houston. J. Lewis Thompson was a leading conservationist and an early supporter of the Texas Forestry Association and the Texas Forest Service.
The widow of his brother, Mrs. Hoxie H. Thompson deposited some Thompson Papers, a history of the family lumbering business, and a great number of photographs with the Forest History Archives of the Stephen F. Austin State University Library. The pictures, especially, are most useful in recreating the history of the Texas lumber industry during the bonanza era.
Early Thompson Brothers Photo
Members of the Thompson family were among the earliest lumber manufacturers in Texas, having begun operations with a small sawmill in Rusk County built by Benjamin P. Thompson and his sons. Eventually moving their operations to Willard in Trinity County where they built a large mill, the family expanded their business to cover a large area of southeast Texas. Headquarters for the complex of companies in which the family was involved were finally established in Houston.