Sequoia sempervirens, California coastal redwood, was Humboldt County's
economic mainstay from the 1850s onwards. By the early 20th century,
harvesting red gold was the major industry along California's North
Coast, with Humboldt at the forefront of the industry. The first half of
the 20th century saw technological changes in logging and milling. New
uses for redwood included cigar boxes, presto-logs, and core logs for
plywood. The industry began reforestation practices, growing their own
seedlings as early as 1907. World War I and the Great Depression
impacted the industry, as did activism to preserve the redwoods. In the
1930s, the largest stand of old-growth redwoods was preserved, and the
turmoil of the 1935 strike resulted in several strikers being killed in
Eureka. This book explores Humboldt's early-20th-century lumber industry
and day-to-day realities of life in the mills and woods in an era
underrepresented in published logging history.