Abstract
THE LUMBER BUSINESS provides key insights to the evolution and expansion of industrial capitalism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries because of its propensity toward overproduction, cutthroat competition, and chronically unstable markets. Disorder and chaotic activity eventually brought forth a leadership bent on alleviating these tendencies through trade association cooperation on both regional and national levels. Modernists in the industry, including many prominent national lumbermen, were foremost among those who pressed for greater industrial cooperation and a lessening of discord and strife.' Although the First World War served as the great
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