History: Built near the end of World War I, the Spruce Production Division was organized to build a railroad line to transport spruce wood from the western Olympic Peninsula to the nearby lumber mills and ultimately to aircraft manufacturing plants in the east. The railroad was completed in 1919, a year too late for its intended purpose; it was abandoned in 1951.
Why spruce wood? And why Clallam County?
Spruce wood was the best for constructing airplanes.......... and remember that World War I era planes were made of wood...........for it would not splinter, shatter or snap. And it was light and strong, perfect for the job.
Demand for aircraft in Europe during World War I soared. The Aircraft Production Products Board of the U.S. wanted 3,000,000 board feet of lumber per month.
(Here is a pix of 7,000,000 board feet....... it's a wonder there are any spruce trees left!)
The project cost $10,000,000 and did produce 88,000,000 board feet of wood which was enough to manufacture 12,000 warplanes.
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