| On the south side of the lock, a
water-powered sawmill with two saws was constructed. Government records show that
14 men were employed directly by the Northwest Company in 1802, in
addition to the voyageurs living in Sault Ste. Marie, who supplied the
crews for bateaux and freight canoes.
During the war of 1812, an armed force
of 150 United States soldiers attacked Sault Ste. Marie, destroying all
buildings and structures, including the locks. Only the stone walls of
the magazine remained. A particularly serious loss was the destruction
of the sawmill, the only one in the entire North West.
Shortly after the attack a temporary
post was constructed at the mouth of the Fort Creek, approximately ¼
mile east of the original site. The Hudson's Bay Company opened a
permanent post in 1842. It remained in service until 1867.
Sault Ste. Marie Industrial Development
Major industrial development began in
Sault Ste. Marie just prior to 1890. During that period, a group of
Philadelphia entrepreneurs, under the leadership of Francis H. Clergue
of Bangor, Maine, became interested in constructing a hydro electric
plant, harnessing the waterpower available from the St. Marys River.
Shortly there after, Clergue
established the Lake Superior Corporation and began construction of a
groundwood pulp mill which became operational in 1895. The pulp grinders
were pocket-type, driven directly through mortise gears, from vertical
water wheels. Pulp produced was dried on single cylinder steam heated
dryers. It was shipped in rolls, by steamer, directly from the docks
below the grinder room.
In 1899, a sulphite mill was
constructed. It consisted of two 17ft. diameter by 54 ft. high, lead
lined vertical digesters. They were in operation until September, 1903,
when they were shut down due to financial difficulties and unfavourable
market conditions. |