Michigan logging wheels

Michigan logging wheels
Logs were suspended
from wheel axle
Genuine Overpack logging wheels are always painted red
11 foot logging wheels
compare 6 foot person
single logging wheel

Michigan logging wheels[1], also known as big wheels, high wheels, logging wheels, logger wheels, lumbering wheels, bummer carts, katydids or nibs[2], are a type of skidder.[3] It extended the season in which the logging industry could extract timber from the North Woods of Michigan, by removing the need for icy ground to travel over. The logging wheels were a specially designed large set of wooden wagon wheels that could carry logs that were up to 100 feet in length, several at a time.

Michigan logging wheels (big wheels) were invented by Silas C. Overpack in 1875.[4][5] At the time Michigan was the nation's leading producer of lumber.[6][7] His equipment could be identified as genuine as it was always painted red.[8]

Contents

Usage

Overpack's logging wheels could haul logs without the need for icy ground. They did not sink into mud in the wet terrain of the northern woods where ordinary wagon wheels would get mired in the spring thaw. The wheels also enabled a team of horses to pull several logs at a time. The logs were held by a chain that suspended the logs' weight from the wheel axle, creating a stabilizing, low center of gravity.[9]

Sizes

Overpack sold three sizes of big wheels: 9 feet (2.74 m) high, 9 feet 6 inches (2.90 m) high and 10 feet (3.05 m) high; they cost $100 per diameter foot, a quite considerable investment for the time.[10] Unlike a wagon which carries a load above its axle, these huge wheels carried logs chained beneath the axle. The wheels could carry logs from 12 feet (3.66 m) to 100 feet (30 m) in length and enough logs to total 1,000 to 2,000 board feet of lumber in a single load.[11] The axles were manufactured from hard maple, and the 16-foot tongues were made of ironwood. The wheels were clad with iron rims to protect them from stumps, fallen trees, and rocky terrain. Interior iron rings reinforced the wooden spokes of the wheels. They were pulled by horses, oxen, or tractors.

History

Overpack was a wheelwright in Manistee, Michigan around 1875, when he was approached by a farmer to build a set of 8 feet (2.44 m) wagon wheels. He built these unusually large wagon wheels and sold them to the local farmer. Time passed and later this same farmer returned asking Overpack for an even larger set of wagon wheels. Overpack was very curious by this time. He asked the farmer what he was doing with such large wagon wheels. The farmer replied he was using them to skid logs.[3]

From then on Overpack's big wheels were part of Michigan logging history. Many northern states used them, and Michigan alone had at least 65 different lumber companies that had them.[5] Michigan's rough and wet forest terrain made logging strictly a winter industry in the nineteenth century. The loggers used frozen ground to skid the logs from the woods to the railheads of rails or to river banks for further transporting. In the spring they would slide the logs from the banking grounds into the rivers for the log drive to the saw mills. Overpack made logging possible in all four seasons when he began manufacturing Michigan logging wheels at his Manistee wagon business.[12]

When Overpack exhibited his Michigan logging wheels at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, they were a sensation and quickly caught on in the forests of the Pacific Northwest. They "received first premium and medal" at this World's Fair.[13] Overpack solicited the support of the Redding Iron Works Company to aid in supplying his product to the western United States. He needed their aid to help overcome shipping issues, which they were able to do with their proximity to the West Coast timber industry.[3] They became then another builder of Overpack's Michigan logging wheels.[14] He then began manufacturing on a large scale and ultimately made thousands of logging wheels.[9] He sold them worldwide and shipped via railroad to other states and Canada.[9] The U.S. Army Forestry Department even took several to France during World War I.[5] They were discontinued by 1930.

Locations containing logging wheels

Gallery

Michigan logging wheels examples
Michigan logging
circa 1922  
Hauling logs
circa 1900  
Missaukee County, Michigan, circa 1915  
Cadillac Big Wheels,
circa 1908  
Logging wheels at
Knotts Berry Farm  
Manistee Michigan museum display  
Manistee Museum
front lawn  
Logging wheel display Flagstaff railway station.  
Logging wheels located east of Death Valley  
Logging wheels at
White Pine Village  
Slip tongue log skidder Institute of Texan Cultures  
Logging wheels demonstration  
Hauling log on axial  
Hub of logging wheel  

References

  1. ^ The backtracks of high wheel logging by Lorraine Platz
  2. ^ Percy W Blandford (1976). Old Farm Tools and Machinery. David & Charles. pp. 153–154. ISBN 0-7153-7151-7. 
  3. ^ a b c Out of the woods - Big Wheels history
  4. ^ Powers, Perry Francis, A History of Northern Michigan and Its People, 1912, p. 707, Lewis Publishing Company, An original at University of Michigan.
  5. ^ a b c Moving wood in Michigan by Arvind Badrinarayanan
  6. ^ Lumbering in Michigan
  7. ^ Background reading - Lumbering in Michigan by Maria Quinlan
  8. ^ The Big Wheels
  9. ^ a b c Kids' education on logging industry
  10. ^ Dickmann, Donald, The Forests of Michigan, pp 132-133, University of Michigan Press (2003), ISBN 0472068164
  11. ^ Traverse City in Vintage Postcards By C. S. Wright, page 11
  12. ^ Timeline of Wood
  13. ^ Cabot, James L., Images of America - Ludington 1830 - 1930, 2005, ISBN 0-7385-3951-1, P. 21
  14. ^ Big Wheels Resort
  15. ^ Hartwick Pines Logging Museum

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