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History of papermaking in New York

The History of Papermaking in New York had its beginnings in the late 18th century, at a time when linen and cotton rags were the primary source of fibers in the manufacturing process. By 1850 there were more than 106 paper mills in New York, more than in any other state.[1] A landmark in the history of papermaking in the United States was the installation of the first Fourdrinier machine in the country at a mill in Saugerties, New York, in 1827.[2] Papermaking from ground-wood pulp began in New York in 1869, with the establishment of the Hudson River Pulp & Paper Company in Corinth and also with the work of Illustrious Remington and his sons in Watertown. The innovation and success of the Remingtons spurred further development of the industry in the state.

Early paper mills edit

There is documentation that the New York merchant John Keating opened a paper mill in Manhattan in 1768, although no watermarks have been attributed to that mill.[3] In 1772 Keating moved his mill to Continental Village, in Putnam County, NY, where it operated for a few years, until it was set afire by British troops in 1777, during the American Revolution.[3]

In 1773, the Manhattan-based printer and bookseller Hugh Gaine, in partnership with Hendrick Onderdonk and Henry Remsen, established a paper mill at Hempstead Harbor (later called Roslyn), on Long Island. Watermarks of this consortium, based on a combination of the partners' initials, appear on printings of New York state laws in 1775.[4]

First groundwood papermaking edit

The first mechanical invention to revolutionize paper making was the fourdrinier machine invented in 1799, in France, by Nicholas Louis Robert and perfected by Henry Fourdrinier and his brother, Sealey. The second was the Keller-Voelter grinders for turning wood into wood pulp.

In 1866, Albrecht Pagenstecher, a German immigrant living in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, together with his brother Rudolf, bought two German-made Keller-Voelter grinders. As stated by Albrecht Pagenstecher himself:[5][6] on March 5, 1867, in nearby Curtisville, he was the first in the United States to manufacture commercially viable 'groundwood' wood pulp. He sold the pulp to the Smith Paper Company which on March 8, 1867 produced commercial newsprint paper.[5][7] Pagenstecher made his pulp out of aspen or "popple" and soon the supply of available popple ran out.[8] The New York World reluctantly cancelled its contract for the newsprint, which the Smith Paper Company of Lee, Massachusetts was making from this new woodpulp.[6] In despair, Pagenstecher returned to Saxony and asked Heinrich Voelter what he could do.[9] "We too have run out of popple," was the reply, "but we are using spruce. Have you any spruce in America?" To this Pagenstecher could only reply, "I do not know, but I'll find out."

Early visions of wood-based papermaking in New York edit

Cornell Professor of Forest Management, and a leader and consultant to the pulp and paper industry, Arthur Bernhard Recknagel[10] (1906 graduate of Yale forestry school; at Cornell from 1913 to 1943; forester and executive secretary of Empire State Forest Products Association[11][12] from 1917 to 1948), used to tell how his uncle, Albrecht Pagenstecher[9][13] returned home from Saxony and, fortunately, asked his friend, Senator Warren Miller, who suggested that they go to Saratoga Springs and make inquiries there for spruce. From Saratoga they drove to Luzerne, at the confluence of the Hudson and Sacandaga Rivers, and learned that spruce was abundantly available in these watersheds.

It all started for the Paine family in 1885. Several years before, Augustus G. Paine Sr. had sold the Champlain Fiber and Pulp Co., of Willsboro, New York, an 'evaporator' to recover and reuse the expensive chemicals used in “cooking” wood chips. Like many equipment dealers, Paine not only marketed his product but financed it as well. When Champlain Fiber went bellyup, Paine's note made him the proud owner of his very own pulp mill.[14]

A.G.Paine Sr. summoned his bachelor son home from studies in England to run the plant. His son, Augustus G. Paine, Jr., moved to Willsboro, New York in 1885 to take over management of the local pulp mill. With his good management, the mill prospered and became part of the New York and Pennsylvania Paper Company, one of the country's leading paper manufacturers which would operate until the mid-1960s, supplying paper to Ladies’ Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post.[15][16]

The J. & J. Rogers Company put Au Sable Forks on the map and employed the community for over a century. Making paper from wood pulp was its second business. Iron was its first. "The J. & J. Rogers Company was a big part of why we have an Adirondack Park," acknowledges Jim Rogers (James Rogers III), a descendant of one of the company's founders who lives in Lake Placid.

At the time, James Rogers Jr. controlled roughly 75,000 acres of timberland on which much of the hardwood had been cut for charcoal to make iron. A business opportunity occurred to him: harvest the remaining softwood, mostly spruce, for wood pulp, the new way of making paper! The paper mill was built in 1902.[17]

Hudson River Pulp & Paper Mills edit

 
Former offices on International Paper in Corinth, NY

Albrecht Pagenstecher and his friend Senator Warren Miller's trip resulted in the Hudson River Pulp & Paper Company which started making groundwood and newsprint in 1869 at Palmer (Corinth), New York, near Luzerne.[18]

Following its acquisition by the International Paper Company in 1898, the Hudson River facility became the firm's "flagship mill" and site of its principal office.[19] Pagenstecher served on International Paper's Board of Directors.[20][21]

After World War II, Hudson River millworkers developed and perfected the production of coated papers for International Paper. In November 2002, shifting economic forces resulted in the mill's closure; nine years later, in 2011, it was slated for demolition.[22][23][24]

Finch Paper LLC (Finch, Pruyn Company) is an American paper manufacturing corporation, operating in Glens Falls, New York, for 150 years.[25][26][27]

In Mechanicville, New York, Westvaco Corporation's MeadWestvaco 6 paper machines ran non-stop to feed the printing presses of the nation's leading publishers. After WWII the Westvaco plant was the largest 'book-paper' mill in the world. It closed in 1971.[28][29][30][31][32]

In Ballston Spa, NY, George West (American politician) gradually acquired nine water-powered mills on Kayaderosseras Creek by 1879 manufacturing cotton, paper, and paper bags.West was called "The Paper Bag King" because he was one of the first men in the country to manufacture paper bags at a time when most bags were made from cotton.[33][34][35][36][37] Today Rock City Falls is largely residential, although the Cottrell Paper Company [38] still operates much as it did one hundred years ago making electrical insulating paper.

Wood-based papermaking in Watertown edit

Even while Pagenstecher was starting up the Hudson River mill, in 1869 Illustrious Remington and his three sons, Hiram, Alfred D. and Charles R., were making a ton of newsprint daily in Watertown, New York, using four rag machines and an 84" fourdrinier machine. By 1870, the Remingtons, seeing a future for wood pulp, built three mills on Sewall's Island in Watertown. These mills used the Voelter process allowing a low-cost, high-quality Remington newsprint to be made of 75% rags and 25% wood pulp instead of all-rag content paper costing five times more.[39]

A third invention caught the imagination of the Remingtons. In 1867, Benjamin Tilghman, an American chemist, discovered that sulphurous acid (H2SO3) dissolved the lignin in wood, leaving a residue of cellulose fibers. Nought came of this discovery. However, Alfred D. Remington learned that a Swede, Carl Daniel Ekman, was teaching papermakers in Sweden to make paper entirely out of wood pulp by using a sulphite process (SO3). Remington went to Sweden to see "This Miracle" for himself. He was so impressed that he imported Swedish chemical fiber for several years and later developed the "sulphite process" in his own plant on Sewall's Island.[39]

The Remingtons were selling newsprint to the New York Times. They received an order for ten tons stipulating that the newsprint contain no wood pulp! A. D. Remington, proud of his new product, sent it to the Times along with a note, asking them to try it. The reply was, "come and get your paper", which he did. It wasn't long before the Times was eager and willing to buy this new and cheaper newsprint.[39]

The revolution in paper-making in the Black River region was complete: fourdrinier machines became bigger and bigger and faster and faster; the demand for spruce was insatiable and the lumbermen practically denuded the virgin forests; the unpleasant odor of the sulphite mills replaced the equally unpleasant odor of the tanneries. Other paper-makers, emulating the success of the Remingtons embarked on a costly program of mass-production of wood pulp newsprint.[40][full citation needed]

Gould Paper Company edit

G. Henry P. Gould was the founder of the Gould Paper Company in Lyons Falls, New York.[41]

In 1956 the Lyons Falls Paper Corporation took over operations. They put in a hardwood pulping plant. They were the first paper maker in the United States to use this type of process.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Valente, A. J. (2010). Rag Paper Manufacture in the United States, 1801–1900: A History, with directories of mills and owners. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. p. 61.
  2. ^ Valente (2010), p. 8.
  3. ^ a b Bidwell, John (2013). American Paper Mills, 1690–1832: A Directory of the Paper Trade, with notes on products, watermarks, distribution methods, and manufacturing techniques. Hanover, N.H.: Dartmouth College Press. p. 196.
  4. ^ Bidwell (2013), p. 198.
  5. ^ a b "Groundwood." A. Pagenstrecher. Paper Trade Journal. Oct. 16, 1897. page 19. Also Paper Trade Journal, March 19, 1942, page 22.
  6. ^ a b Recknagel, A.B.(Forestry Consultant, St. Regis Paper Company), "The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York", The Northeastern Logger (Old Forge), page 16, May 1960.
  7. ^ Hunter, Dard (1947). Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft (2nd edition) Knopf, New York, page 378, OCLC 383666 (republished in 1978 in facsimile by Dover, New York)
  8. ^ Recknagel, A.B.(Forestry Consultant, St. Regis Paper Company), "The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York", The Northeastern Logger (Old Forge), page 16, May 1960
  9. ^ a b Recknagel, A.B.(Forestry Consultant, St. Regis Paper Company), "The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York", The Northeastern Logger (Old Forge), May 1960. Also retold in Thomas, Howard, 1963, Black River in the North Country, p.98-100; Prospect Books, Prospect, NY.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-02. Retrieved 2011-09-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ "Guide to the Empire State Forest Products Association Records,1917–1961". Rmc.library.cornell.edu. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
  12. ^ "Home". ESFPA. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
  13. ^ . Cornwall On Hudson. 2006-11-29. Archived from the original on 2011-10-05. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
  14. ^ https://www.aarch.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/040917aVLPWillsboroPoint.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  15. ^ "Adirondack Life Article - Peter Paine - Adirondack Life". www.adirondacklifemag.com. 14 September 2017. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  16. ^ "Vintage Postcard: Willsboro Paper Mill". Essex on Lake Champlain. 2017-11-08. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  17. ^ "Undamming Rome". Ausable River Association. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
  18. ^ "The Hudson River Mill Project". The Hudson River Mill Project. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
  19. ^ "Adirondack Life Article - One Hundred Years of Paper Work - Adirondack Life". www.adirondacklifemag.com. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  20. ^ Recknagel, A.B. (Forestry Consultant, St. Regis Paper Company) "The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York", The Northeastern Logger (Old Forge), May 1960. Also retold in Thomas, Howard, 1963, Black River in the North Country. Prospect, NY: Prospect Books, pp. 98–100.
  21. ^ Mumford, Warren (29 November 2006). "History: The Pagenstecher Family: From Rags to Riches". www.cornwall-on-hudson.com. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  22. ^ http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=73062&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=307127
  23. ^ About: The Hudson River Mill Project
  24. ^ Former paper mill site in Adirondacks to be demolished
  25. ^ "History - Papermaking History | Finch Paper". Finch Paper, LLC. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  26. ^ "News". 24 August 2000.
  27. ^ "Finch CEO opens up | Glens Falls Chronicle". www.glensfallschronicle.com. 2015-02-12. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-01-23. Retrieved 2017-08-18.
  29. ^ "Paper City - Part I of III". www.mechanicville.com. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  30. ^ "Paper City - Part II of III". www.mechanicville.com. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  31. ^ "Paper City - Part III of III". www.mechanicville.com. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-04-21. Retrieved 2017-08-18.
  33. ^ "History-Timeless Since 1866".
  34. ^ "In Praise of the Humble Paper Bag • Coopernundrums". 4 July 2017.
  35. ^ "Saratoga County Mills Using Manila Hemp Were Home to 'The Paper Bag King'". 27 September 2020.
  36. ^ "The Paper Bag King".
  37. ^ "Who Really Designed the Brown Paper Bag?". 12 November 2010.
  38. ^ "Home". cottrellpaper.com.
  39. ^ a b c Thomas, Howard. 1963. Black River in the North Country. Prospect, NY: Prospect Books, pp. 98–100.
  40. ^ "Fifty Years of the Empire State Forest Products Association," by Nelson C. Brown and A.B. Recknagel, 1957
  41. ^ "Lyons Falls History ...Gould Paper Company".

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources History of papermaking in New York news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The History of Papermaking in New York had its beginnings in the late 18th century at a time when linen and cotton rags were the primary source of fibers in the manufacturing process By 1850 there were more than 106 paper mills in New York more than in any other state 1 A landmark in the history of papermaking in the United States was the installation of the first Fourdrinier machine in the country at a mill in Saugerties New York in 1827 2 Papermaking from ground wood pulp began in New York in 1869 with the establishment of the Hudson River Pulp amp Paper Company in Corinth and also with the work of Illustrious Remington and his sons in Watertown The innovation and success of the Remingtons spurred further development of the industry in the state Contents 1 Early paper mills 2 First groundwood papermaking 3 Early visions of wood based papermaking in New York 4 Hudson River Pulp amp Paper Mills 5 Wood based papermaking in Watertown 6 Gould Paper Company 7 See also 8 ReferencesEarly paper mills editThere is documentation that the New York merchant John Keating opened a paper mill in Manhattan in 1768 although no watermarks have been attributed to that mill 3 In 1772 Keating moved his mill to Continental Village in Putnam County NY where it operated for a few years until it was set afire by British troops in 1777 during the American Revolution 3 In 1773 the Manhattan based printer and bookseller Hugh Gaine in partnership with Hendrick Onderdonk and Henry Remsen established a paper mill at Hempstead Harbor later called Roslyn on Long Island Watermarks of this consortium based on a combination of the partners initials appear on printings of New York state laws in 1775 4 First groundwood papermaking editThe first mechanical invention to revolutionize paper making was the fourdrinier machine invented in 1799 in France by Nicholas Louis Robert and perfected by Henry Fourdrinier and his brother Sealey The second was the Keller Voelter grinders for turning wood into wood pulp In 1866 Albrecht Pagenstecher a German immigrant living in Stockbridge Massachusetts together with his brother Rudolf bought two German made Keller Voelter grinders As stated by Albrecht Pagenstecher himself 5 6 on March 5 1867 in nearby Curtisville he was the first in the United States to manufacture commercially viable groundwood wood pulp He sold the pulp to the Smith Paper Company which on March 8 1867 produced commercial newsprint paper 5 7 Pagenstecher made his pulp out of aspen or popple and soon the supply of available popple ran out 8 The New York World reluctantly cancelled its contract for the newsprint which the Smith Paper Company of Lee Massachusetts was making from this new woodpulp 6 In despair Pagenstecher returned to Saxony and asked Heinrich Voelter what he could do 9 We too have run out of popple was the reply but we are using spruce Have you any spruce in America To this Pagenstecher could only reply I do not know but I ll find out Early visions of wood based papermaking in New York editCornell Professor of Forest Management and a leader and consultant to the pulp and paper industry Arthur Bernhard Recknagel 10 1906 graduate of Yale forestry school at Cornell from 1913 to 1943 forester and executive secretary of Empire State Forest Products Association 11 12 from 1917 to 1948 used to tell how his uncle Albrecht Pagenstecher 9 13 returned home from Saxony and fortunately asked his friend Senator Warren Miller who suggested that they go to Saratoga Springs and make inquiries there for spruce From Saratoga they drove to Luzerne at the confluence of the Hudson and Sacandaga Rivers and learned that spruce was abundantly available in these watersheds It all started for the Paine family in 1885 Several years before Augustus G Paine Sr had sold the Champlain Fiber and Pulp Co of Willsboro New York an evaporator to recover and reuse the expensive chemicals used in cooking wood chips Like many equipment dealers Paine not only marketed his product but financed it as well When Champlain Fiber went bellyup Paine s note made him the proud owner of his very own pulp mill 14 A G Paine Sr summoned his bachelor son home from studies in England to run the plant His son Augustus G Paine Jr moved to Willsboro New York in 1885 to take over management of the local pulp mill With his good management the mill prospered and became part of the New York and Pennsylvania Paper Company one of the country s leading paper manufacturers which would operate until the mid 1960s supplying paper to Ladies Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post 15 16 The J amp J Rogers Company put Au Sable Forks on the map and employed the community for over a century Making paper from wood pulp was its second business Iron was its first The J amp J Rogers Company was a big part of why we have an Adirondack Park acknowledges Jim Rogers James Rogers III a descendant of one of the company s founders who lives in Lake Placid At the time James Rogers Jr controlled roughly 75 000 acres of timberland on which much of the hardwood had been cut for charcoal to make iron A business opportunity occurred to him harvest the remaining softwood mostly spruce for wood pulp the new way of making paper The paper mill was built in 1902 17 Hudson River Pulp amp Paper Mills edit nbsp Former offices on International Paper in Corinth NYAlbrecht Pagenstecher and his friend Senator Warren Miller s trip resulted in the Hudson River Pulp amp Paper Company which started making groundwood and newsprint in 1869 at Palmer Corinth New York near Luzerne 18 Following its acquisition by the International Paper Company in 1898 the Hudson River facility became the firm s flagship mill and site of its principal office 19 Pagenstecher served on International Paper s Board of Directors 20 21 After World War II Hudson River millworkers developed and perfected the production of coated papers for International Paper In November 2002 shifting economic forces resulted in the mill s closure nine years later in 2011 it was slated for demolition 22 23 24 Finch Paper LLC Finch Pruyn Company is an American paper manufacturing corporation operating in Glens Falls New York for 150 years 25 26 27 In Mechanicville New York Westvaco Corporation s MeadWestvaco 6 paper machines ran non stop to feed the printing presses of the nation s leading publishers After WWII the Westvaco plant was the largest book paper mill in the world It closed in 1971 28 29 30 31 32 In Ballston Spa NY George West American politician gradually acquired nine water powered mills on Kayaderosseras Creek by 1879 manufacturing cotton paper and paper bags West was called The Paper Bag King because he was one of the first men in the country to manufacture paper bags at a time when most bags were made from cotton 33 34 35 36 37 Today Rock City Falls is largely residential although the Cottrell Paper Company 38 still operates much as it did one hundred years ago making electrical insulating paper Wood based papermaking in Watertown editEven while Pagenstecher was starting up the Hudson River mill in 1869 Illustrious Remington and his three sons Hiram Alfred D and Charles R were making a ton of newsprint daily in Watertown New York using four rag machines and an 84 fourdrinier machine By 1870 the Remingtons seeing a future for wood pulp built three mills on Sewall s Island in Watertown These mills used the Voelter process allowing a low cost high quality Remington newsprint to be made of 75 rags and 25 wood pulp instead of all rag content paper costing five times more 39 A third invention caught the imagination of the Remingtons In 1867 Benjamin Tilghman an American chemist discovered that sulphurous acid H2SO3 dissolved the lignin in wood leaving a residue of cellulose fibers Nought came of this discovery However Alfred D Remington learned that a Swede Carl Daniel Ekman was teaching papermakers in Sweden to make paper entirely out of wood pulp by using a sulphite process SO3 Remington went to Sweden to see This Miracle for himself He was so impressed that he imported Swedish chemical fiber for several years and later developed the sulphite process in his own plant on Sewall s Island 39 The Remingtons were selling newsprint to the New York Times They received an order for ten tons stipulating that the newsprint contain no wood pulp A D Remington proud of his new product sent it to the Times along with a note asking them to try it The reply was come and get your paper which he did It wasn t long before the Times was eager and willing to buy this new and cheaper newsprint 39 The revolution in paper making in the Black River region was complete fourdrinier machines became bigger and bigger and faster and faster the demand for spruce was insatiable and the lumbermen practically denuded the virgin forests the unpleasant odor of the sulphite mills replaced the equally unpleasant odor of the tanneries Other paper makers emulating the success of the Remingtons embarked on a costly program of mass production of wood pulp newsprint 40 full citation needed Gould Paper Company editG Henry P Gould was the founder of the Gould Paper Company in Lyons Falls New York 41 In 1956 the Lyons Falls Paper Corporation took over operations They put in a hardwood pulping plant They were the first paper maker in the United States to use this type of process citation needed See also editHistory of paper History of papermaking in MassachusettsReferences edit Valente A J 2010 Rag Paper Manufacture in the United States 1801 1900 A History with directories of mills and owners Jefferson N C McFarland p 61 Valente 2010 p 8 a b Bidwell John 2013 American Paper Mills 1690 1832 A Directory of the Paper Trade with notes on products watermarks distribution methods and manufacturing techniques Hanover N H Dartmouth College Press p 196 Bidwell 2013 p 198 a b Groundwood A Pagenstrecher Paper Trade Journal Oct 16 1897 page 19 Also Paper Trade Journal March 19 1942 page 22 a b Recknagel A B Forestry Consultant St Regis Paper Company The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York The Northeastern Logger Old Forge page 16 May 1960 Hunter Dard 1947 Papermaking The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft 2nd edition Knopf New York page 378 OCLC 383666 republished in 1978 in facsimile by Dover New York Recknagel A B Forestry Consultant St Regis Paper Company The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York The Northeastern Logger Old Forge page 16 May 1960 a b Recknagel A B Forestry Consultant St Regis Paper Company The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York The Northeastern Logger Old Forge May 1960 Also retold in Thomas Howard 1963 Black River in the North Country p 98 100 Prospect Books Prospect NY Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 02 Retrieved 2011 09 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Guide to the Empire State Forest Products Association Records 1917 1961 Rmc library cornell edu Retrieved 2011 09 19 Home ESFPA Retrieved 2011 09 19 Our Town A Look at Cornwall on Hudson NY History of Cornwall on Hudson NY The Pagenstecher Family From Rags to Riches Cornwall On Hudson 2006 11 29 Archived from the original on 2011 10 05 Retrieved 2011 09 19 https www aarch org wp content uploads 2014 08 040917aVLPWillsboroPoint pdf bare URL PDF Adirondack Life Article Peter Paine Adirondack Life www adirondacklifemag com 14 September 2017 Retrieved 2021 01 13 Vintage Postcard Willsboro Paper Mill Essex on Lake Champlain 2017 11 08 Retrieved 2021 01 13 Undamming Rome Ausable River Association Retrieved 2021 01 06 The Hudson River Mill Project The Hudson River Mill Project Retrieved 2011 09 19 Adirondack Life Article One Hundred Years of Paper Work Adirondack Life www adirondacklifemag com Retrieved 2021 01 13 Recknagel A B Forestry Consultant St Regis Paper Company The Pulp and Paper Industry in Northern and Central New York The Northeastern Logger Old Forge May 1960 Also retold in Thomas Howard 1963 Black River in the North Country Prospect NY Prospect Books pp 98 100 Mumford Warren 29 November 2006 History The Pagenstecher Family From Rags to Riches www cornwall on hudson com Retrieved 2021 01 13 http phx corporate ir net phoenix zhtml c 73062 amp p irol newsArticle amp ID 307127 About The Hudson River Mill Project Former paper mill site in Adirondacks to be demolished History Papermaking History Finch Paper Finch Paper LLC Retrieved 2021 01 13 News 24 August 2000 Finch CEO opens up Glens Falls Chronicle www glensfallschronicle com 2015 02 12 Retrieved 2021 01 13 The Mechanicville Mile A Paper City Relic is Crumpled up Archived from the original on 2015 01 23 Retrieved 2017 08 18 Paper City Part I of III www mechanicville com Retrieved 2021 01 13 Paper City Part II of III www mechanicville com Retrieved 2021 01 13 Paper City Part III of III www mechanicville com Retrieved 2021 01 13 Inventory of the Westvaco Corporation Records 1902 2000 Archived from the original on 2017 04 21 Retrieved 2017 08 18 History Timeless Since 1866 In Praise of the Humble Paper Bag Coopernundrums 4 July 2017 Saratoga County Mills Using Manila Hemp Were Home to The Paper Bag King 27 September 2020 The Paper Bag King Who Really Designed the Brown Paper Bag 12 November 2010 Home cottrellpaper com a b c Thomas Howard 1963 Black River in the North Country Prospect NY Prospect Books pp 98 100 Fifty Years of the Empire State Forest Products Association by Nelson C Brown and A B Recknagel 1957 Lyons Falls History Gould Paper Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of papermaking in New York amp oldid 1177487709, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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