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126:, but he did not seek public office that would have distracted from his lumber manufacturing and sales interests. He served in a national capacity as a member of the American Commission to study rural credits in Europe; as a member of the State Board of Forestry, and as chairman of the Park Commission of the City of Birmingham.
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John Lanzel Kaul, capitalist, of
Birmingham, Ala., killed himself after a spree at Atlantic City by jumping from a window. Kaul was one of the most vicious labor haters in the South, was always among the worst enemies of any attempt on the part of workers employed in his lumber industry to organize.
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Whereas radical newspapers slandered him, the
Alabama State Commission of Forestry praised him for his "ability, energy and devotion to duty contributed greatly to the advancement of forestry...his public service, and splendid personal qualities were held in highest regard and esteem by the
108:. When he was 19 years old, Mr. Kaul started work at his father's lumber company, and in 1888 put in charge of the operation of the hardwood mill of the company. In 1889 he moved to the south to locate a yellow pine tract for operation, and he settled in
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Kaul was formerly the president of the
Birmingham Chapter of the Red Cross, and engaged in other “patriotic” activities that were safe for him. The Birmingham plutes who head lynch mobs will miss their drunken friend.
119:, then United States Forester, to greatly reduce practices that wasted wood. He also belonged to the National Lumberman's Committee on Forestry and was chairman of the Southern Pine Forestry Committee.
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Kaul served as president of the
Southern Pine Association and was a pioneer in the activities to assure conservation of the national timber supply. He worked with
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85:(1866–1931) was an American businessman. He was involved in the timber industry and was a prominent figure in
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on
October 9, 1866 to Andrew Kaul and Walburga (Lanzel) Kaul. He was a student at Rock Hill College in
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in 1890. He later moved to
Birmingham, where he served as the president of Kaul Lumber Company.
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The Marion County News (Hamilton, Alabama), 03 Dec 1931, Thursday, Page 1
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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Men of the South: A Work for the
Newspaper Reference Library
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Papergreat: From the
Notepad #2: Kaul Lumber Company
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151:newspaper said the following about Kaul's death:
147:In an article entitled "Parasite Kills Self", the
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272:American businesspeople in timber
282:Businesspeople from Pennsylvania
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199:Daniel Decatur Moore (1922).
142:Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo
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238:"Southern Worker Archives"
140:Kaul was a member of the
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102:Eastman Business College
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