Birds Eye View of the City of Grand Rapids, Wood Co. Wis 1874This engraving illustrates many aspects of the lumber industry of the time. Sections of the engraving have been enlarged to make some of the details clearer.

[Grand Rapids; a place I think then of about eight hundred
inhabitants, with three or four saw mills; and the principal industry was
lumbering. (Brazeau)]

The main rapids are at the top of the image. One raft is entering the lower rapids, while another has just exited them and is
heading for the Eddy on the east shore. Rafts often tied up in the Eddy to wait
for the rest of their fleet to pass the rapids. Known as the Grand Rapids, the
1904 Consolidated dam covers them. Downriver from one of the now vanished
islands, a skiff waits to recover crew in case of an accident.
[After they got down below the rapids, the main rapids, they generally pulled it
at the bridge at Wisconsin Rapids and laid up again. And sometimes they would
pull in at the bridge, and the water would get away from them and they would
stay there for a number of weeks, waiting for water to get below them.
(Brazeau)]

Several companies were located on islands near the rapids. They used small
dams between the island and shore or between the islands to generate water
power. In 1874, this seems to have included a saw mill as evidenced by the log
booms and stacks of lumber. These islands were later occupied by the Nash
Mill, Paterick & Mahoney's Machine Shop & Foundry and the Pioneer
Wood Pulp Co.
[These logs were hauled to the mill
pond and rolled in and logs taken from the pond up a log slide to the carriage
floor and there sawed. This lumber was then loaded onto small cars and pushed
out into the yards and piled for seasoning. (Taylor)]

Just downriver from the bridge (current Grand Avenue) are a series of booms.
These were used to steer the logs to the east side of the river where they were
held between Belle Island (known then as Neeves Island) and the shore.
[Then right below the bridge there was a place below there called Neeves Island,
and there was a series of rapids there which were very bad, but not as bad as
Grand Rapids. The rocks were not as high; but when the water was down you didn't
have a good stage of water, you couldn't make it over there at all because the
rocks are almost continuous. They are there yet. When they pull the head of
South Side Dam down, those rocks are sticking up there, and you can't go down
even in a row boat. I have tried it. I might have gone down with the water high
there. You can hear the roar of that rapids for half a mile away. They couldn't
get over those rapids in low water. (Brazeau)
The lumber that "went down the river" went into the rafts fresh from
the saw mill. On the way down the river, the drive would encounter booms across
the river in different series and in the center of these would be a
"sorting works". This would be a set of gates and as the logs came
down to this gate the drivers would pike pole them into the different gates
according to their log marks. Some booms would carry their individual owners
logs direct to their several mills, while logs intended for farther down the
river would be run into the main gate out into the main channel to encounter
similar sorting works farther down. This sorting was done by the boom companies
chartered for that purpose. (Taylor)]

At the downstream end of Belle Island (Neeves Island) was a saw mill. Note the dam between
the island and the shore, which provided the power for the saw mill. This mill
does not appear in the 1884 Sanborn map. The stacks of lumber on the shore are
probably not to scale, but must have been very large.
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