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On 6 October 1909, the ABC divested itself of the East
Bathurst Mill. The new owners, who were from New York state, formed the Nepisiguit Lumber Company (NLC). Also in 1909, the NLC purchased the shingle mill (near the mouth of Carter's Brook on the Bathurst harbour) of the O.F. Stacy Company, which
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Stone shuttered it in 2005 because of global overcapacity in the pulp and paper business. The
Bathurst plant had at the time capacity for 243,000 tons per annum of corrugated medium. The closure was brought on by the post-millennial trend towards overseas manufacture. The chairman, president and CEO
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reported 19 September 1895 that the Sumner
Company from Moncton had purchased the SLLC from the receivers but two weeks later the same newspaper reported that the English shareholders had rejected the offer of $ 29,000, in favour of Adams & Co. of New York. Burns' brother-in-law Samuel Adams had
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In 1921, the amalgamated company started to build the hydroelectric plant at
Nepisiguit Grand Falls. In the same year, under a Dominion charter, the Bathurst firm was renamed the Bathurst Company Limited. The firm soon began construction of a groundwood mill and the installation of a fourdrinier
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We are in a mature industry that has struggled to achieve adequate returns. We have been unable to pass along inflationary costs, such as energy and fiber, to our customers. In addition, the manufacturing exodus overseas has had a strong impact on containerboard demand throughout North
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The firm invented
Bathurst Corrugating Medium (BCM) in 1950. This product is manufactured from hardwoods by means of a continuous semi-chemical process, and allowed the firm to utilize a greater fraction of the timber; in other words, less waste was generated by its activities.
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In 1914, due to the diminishing supply of large trees on the North Shore, a kraft pulp mill and a sulphite pulp mill were built on the west bank of the
Nepisiguit, close to town in the old Cunard farm property. The new mills each produced daily about 50 tons.
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had been in operation since 1885. The NLC had control of 650 square miles of Crown timber; with this plant the NLC proposed to produce wood pulp but in two years' time, the NLC would enter receivership and the assets reverted to the ABC.
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closed the mill located in East
Bathurst in 2006, and sold the site to a redevelopment firm. The redeveloper, which was already defunct by January 2016, was fined $ 150,000 in July 2016 under the New Brunswick Clean Environment Act.
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About the end of 1927, control of the firm passed to the
Newsprint Bond and Share Corporation and in 1928 the Bathurst Power and Paper Company was formed by them. The local newspaper reported that $ 20 million had changed hands.
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was completed in 1926 at a cost to the private owners of over $ 3 million. The falls drop over 100 feet through a canyon of solid granite. The 400-man project of dam construction lasted a year and a half and ended in 1921.
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reported in April 1897 that the ABC was in the sawmill to install electric lighting so as to operate on a 24-hour day. By 1898, the ABC possessed or licensed from the Crown 250 square miles (64,750ha) of forest.
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The
Bathurst Lumber Company No. 2 Mill (in East Bathurst) was decommissioned and dismantled in January 1928, although this NLC-vintage mill had not been in operation for a number of years prior to this date.
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In 1899, the ABC proposed to enter the wood pulp business, and received from the County
Council a 20-year exemption from the taxes it controlled, however, the proposal did not advance at this time.
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A Canadian Family - Genealogy and Vintage Postcards: "View Near Pulp Mill – Bathurst | Forestry Fridays: Historic Views of Lumber Mills & Logging Scenes in Eastern Canada"
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and John Flanigan to re-form Adams, Burns and Company (ABC). By November 1895 the assets in the county had been settled, and work advanced as planned over the winter of 1895.
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119:. He would eventually become the General Manager and public persona of the firm; about 1925 he erected a "palatial home", that in 1938 was purchased by the new
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In 1919, the Bathurst Lumber Company bought out the Bathurst Electric and Water Power Company, which had been formed in 1904 by Act of Assembly to exploit the
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In the early 1950s, control of the hydroelectric plant at Grand Falls was ceded by the BPPC to a provincial Crown corporation which was named at the time the
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In 1939, the firm purchased the John Fenderson Company, which held the Jacquet River timber concessions from the Crown, and the Jacquet River Boom Company.
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By far the largest private employer in the city for many years, Consolidated-Bathurst in 1977 employed 586 people. In 1989, the company was sold to
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was a combined logging, lumber mill and wood-pulp paper company that supplied its own electric power from
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In 1907 the newly incorporated Bathurst Lumber Company purchased the interests of the Sumner Company.
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180:. Their first project was the construction of a pulp drying machine for the manufacture of boxboard.
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filed suit with Angus McLean over stock options in the firm that he claimed he had been denied.
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Gaspesian Heritage Webmagazine: "Edwards & MacLean / Bathurst Power & Paper Co. Ltd."
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acquired control of Power Corporation in 1968, the two companies were merged to become
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56:, which owned most of the mills of Bathurst and was presided by Burns, foundered. The
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In the early 1960s, Power Corporation bought the Consolidated Paper Company. When
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Northern Light, "Bathurst Company Development in New Brunswick", 29 March 1928
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The next year, 1912, the ABC sold the whole to the Bathurst Lumber Company.
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joined the firm in 1915, and brought with him the rights for timber on the
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virtualmuseum.ca: "The Bathurst Pulp and Paper Industry - A Tale to Tell"
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Northern Light, "Sir James Dunn Cases Postponed Till Fall", 3 May 1928
324:"The photography of Hedley V. Henderson (1891-1964) of Bathurst, N.B."
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machine which in 1923 produced New Brunswick's first newsprint.
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Former Canadian logging, lumber mill and wood-pulp paper company
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Buildings and structures in Gloucester County, New Brunswick
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One Hundred Years of the Pulp and Paper Industry in Bathurst
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of Chicago, Illinois who renamed it Stone Consolidated Inc.
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Majority control of the company was obtained in 1936 by
461:. Nepisiguit Centennial Museum & Cultural Centre.
197:On 1 June 1959 a second boxboard was commissioned.
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405:cbc.ca: "Bathurst mill closes, hundreds lose jobs"
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172:in Nesbitt, Thomson and Company through their
609:Hydroelectric power stations in New Brunswick
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220:of Smurfit-Stone, Patrick J. Moore, stated:
61:combined with his own brother, Thomas D.,
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455:"Bathurst Lumber Company Sawmill No. 2"
434:Historic Bathurst on the Bay of Chaleur
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137:Manufacturing and Trading Company.
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438:. Halifax, NS: Nimbus Publishing.
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430:McCarthy, Aloysius James (1999).
27:. Its operations were centred at
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133:In 1920, the firm purchased the
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21:Bathurst Power and Paper Company
629:Environmental history of Canada
604:Power stations in New Brunswick
144:The hydroelectric power dam at
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213:Stone Container Corporation
178:Power Corporation of Canada
54:St. Lawrence Lumber Company
44:After the death of Senator
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87:reported that the mill at
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19:Established in 1914, the
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619:Economy of New Brunswick
421:MacMillan, Gail (1978).
83:On 25 October 1900, the
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29:Bathurst, New Brunswick
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146:Nepisiguit Grand Falls
25:Nepisiguit Grand Falls
599:Dams in New Brunswick
50:Novelli & Company
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170:Peter A. T. Thomson
52:in March 1894, the
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574:Logging in Canada
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166:Arthur J. Nesbitt
67:Theobald M. Burns
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117:Chaleur Bay
553:Categories
526:65°38′35″W
523:47°36′46″N
135:Cascapedia
256:O'Connell
594:NB Power
579:Sawmills
225:America.
115:side of
85:Courrier
74:Courrier
40:History
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230:Notes
440:ISBN
72:The
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