Converging Storms: The Great New England Hurricane of 1938, the Galford Lumber Company, and the Trans-Regional Socio-Economic Reshaping of Rural America
I. Introduction: The Collision of Weather and Economics
On September 21, 1938, the trajectory of New England’s ecological and economic history was violently altered by a meteorological anomaly of catastrophic proportions. The Great New England Hurricane, known to history as the "Long Island Express," did not merely damage the landscape; it obliterated the region's standing timber inventory, leveling approximately 2.7 to 3 billion board feet of trees in a matter of hours. This event, striking toward the end of the Great Depression, created a paradox of destruction and opportunity: a sudden, overwhelming surplus of raw material in a region that lacked the immediate industrial capacity to process it.
This report provides an exhaustive analysis of a specific, poignant chapter within this broader disaster: the relocation of the Galford Lumber Company from Pocahontas County, West Virginia, to Northfield, Massachusetts. This migration was not simply a commercial logging contract; it was a sociologically significant event where two distinct rural cultures—the Appalachian mountaineers and the New England Yankees—converged in the Connecticut River Valley. Facilitated by the federal New England Timber Salvage Administration (NETSA), this operation represents a unique case study in New Deal-era disaster response, trans-regional labor mobility, and the long-term ecological succession that gave rise to the modern New England landscape.
II. The Meteorological Event and the "Blowdown"
2.1 The Physics of Destruction
To understand the necessity of the Galford Lumber Company’s intervention, one must first comprehend the sheer scale of the 1938 hurricane. The storm was a Category 3 hurricane that moved with terrifying speed—approximately 50 to 60 miles per hour—up the Eastern Seaboard. This forward momentum, combined with the storm's cyclonic winds, resulted in wind velocities that baffled contemporary observers. At the Blue Hill Observatory in Massachusetts, sustained winds reached 121 mph, with gusts recording an unprecedented 186 mph.
Unlike typical hurricanes that dissipate power over land, the 1938 storm acted as a funnel, driving its energy northward along the Connecticut River Valley. This geographical corridor, flanked by the Green Mountains to the west and the White Mountains to the northeast, channeled the winds directly into the heart of New England’s white pine belt. Northfield, Massachusetts, located near the New Hampshire and Vermont borders, lay directly in this path of maximum destruction. The storm’s impact was bifurcated: coastal areas suffered from a massive storm surge, while inland areas like Northfield experienced a "wind event" that acted as an instantaneous clear-cut.
2.2 The Ecological Vulnerability: "Old Field" White Pine
The catastrophic timber loss—referred to as "The Blowdown"—was not random. It was the result of a specific ecological history. In the mid-to-late 19th century, New England witnessed a massive abandonment of agricultural land as farmers moved west or into industrial centers. These abandoned pastures and fields underwent ecological succession, primarily colonized by white pine (Pinus strobus).
By 1938, these "old field" pine stands were 60 to 80 years old. They were mature, dense, and often unmanaged. Crucially, white pine growing in former pastures often lacked the deep root anchorage of trees in virgin forests, and the stands were uniform in height, making them particularly susceptible to "windthrow". The hurricane toppled these trees like dominoes. Estimates suggest that 90% of the windthrown timber was white pine. In the Harvard Forest, just south of Northfield, nearly 70% of the merchantable sawtimber was uprooted or snapped.
2.3 The Economic Crisis of the Woodlot
For the rural residents of Northfield and surrounding towns, this loss was financial devastation. In the rural New England economy of the 1930s, a timber lot was viewed as a "living bank account". Farmers would harvest a few trees when they needed cash for taxes, repairs, or children's education. The hurricane liquidated this savings account instantly.
The immediate crisis was preservation. Downed white pine is highly perishable. Within a year, it falls victim to the pine sawyer beetle and blue stain fungi, which render the wood commercially useless. Furthermore, the tangle of drying resinous needles created a fire hazard of apocalyptic potential for the coming summer of 1939. The region faced a dual imperative: remove the fire threat and salvage the economic value of the wood before it rotted.
III. The Federal Response: NETSA and the Call for Labor
3.1 The Creation of NETSA
The magnitude of the disaster exceeded the capacity of private industry and local government. In response, the federal government established the Northeastern Timber Salvage Administration (NETSA) and the New England Timber Salvage Administration, subsidiaries of the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation.
NETSA’s mandate was to stabilize the timber market. It set floor prices for logs—typically paying landowners between $4 and $5 per thousand board feet for stumpage (the value of the standing tree)—and arranged for the storage and milling of the salvaged wood. The agency established 246 "wet storage" sites—ponds and lakes where logs could be submerged to prevent insect, fungal, and fire damage—and numerous dry storage sites for hardwoods.
3.2 The Labor Vacuum
While NETSA provided the administrative framework and capital, it could not provide the skilled labor. New England’s local labor force was depleted by the Depression or engaged in WPA/CCC infrastructure projects. Moreover, harvesting "windfalls" is notoriously dangerous and technical work. Trees are under immense tension; root balls are unstable; and the "jackstraw" tangles require expert sawing to prevent the logs from snapping or killing the sawyer.
The region needed expert loggers, and it needed them immediately. This necessity prompted the federal government to issue a nationwide call for portable sawmills and skilled crews to come to New England.
IV. The Pocahontas Context: West Virginia in the 1930s
4.1 The Decline of the Appalachian Boom
To understand why Glen Galford would move his entire operation 600 miles north, one must examine the economic conditions of Pocahontas County, West Virginia. In the early 20th century, this region had been the epicenter of a massive timber boom, dominated by industrial giants like the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company in Cass.
However, by the late 1930s, the virgin red spruce and hemlock forests were largely exhausted. The large mills were slowing down, and the Great Depression had crushed the demand for lumber. The local economy had reverted to a mix of subsistence farming and small-scale sawmilling.
4.2 The Profile of Glen Galford
Glen Galford (1889-1947) embodied the resilience of the Appalachian entrepreneur. Born into a "respectably poor" farming family, Galford had married Ruth Hudson in 1910 and raised thirteen children on a farm near Green Bank. He was a man of diverse economic activities—farming, livestock, and operating small sawmills on Back Creek.
By 1938, however, cash was nonexistent. Ruth Galford later recalled the severity of the era: "We didn't have no money for nothing. I don't know how we ever made it". The local market for lumber had evaporated. When Galford saw the notice in The Marlinton Journal on December 1, 1938, advertising the federal salvage operation in New England, it represented a lifeline. It was a chance to deploy his idle machinery and employ his neighbors in a federally subsidized venture.
4.3 The Cultural Divide: "Mountaineers" vs. "Immigrants"
It is notable that Galford’s crew was composed of local West Virginians—men with names like McLaughlin, Sheets, and McCutcheon. This stood in contrast to the industrial logging camps of Cass, which had relied heavily on immigrant labor (Italians, Austrians) and African Americans, often segregated and treated as transient commodities. Galford’s operation was familial and community-based. This cohesion would prove vital for their survival and success in the unfamiliar terrain of Massachusetts.
V. The Odyssey: Relocation and Logistics
5.1 The Contract with Frank Williams
Galford did not move north blindly. He secured a contract with Frank Williams, a prominent resident of Northfield, Massachusetts. Williams (born 1856 or connected to the family of that era) was a contractor and landowner who likely acted as an aggregator for local timber rights, interfacing with NETSA to clear properties. This connection gave Galford a specific destination and a guaranteed scope of work upon arrival.
5.2 The Convoy North
In January 1939, just weeks after the contract was signed, Galford mobilized. The logistics of this move were formidable. The convoy consisted of trucks loaded with the dismantled Frick steam sawmill, the boiler, logging tools, draft horses, and approximately 30 to 40 men.
The route took these rural West Virginians through the heart of the industrialized Northeast, including a daunting passage through New York City. For many of the crew, who had never left the Appalachian Mountains, this was an alien landscape. Leonard "Roose" McCutcheon, a member of the crew, described it as an "entourage and convoy," a spectacle of mountain ingenuity moving north.
To prepare the site, Galford sent his 18-year-old nephew, Ward Crowley, ahead of the main body. Crowley’s task was to set up a Delco plant (a generator system) to provide electricity, as the hurricane had devastated the local power grid in the rural logging areas. This detail highlights the technical self-sufficiency of the Galford operation; they brought their own power, their own tools, and their own housing solutions.
5.3 Arrival and the "Script" Economy
Upon arriving in Northfield, Galford faced a critical liquidity crisis. The expense of the move had drained his cash reserves. In the context of the Depression, traditional bank loans were essentially non-existent for a venture of this nature.
Galford solved this through a remarkable exercise of personal credit and social trust. He negotiated with Dr. George Bronson, the owner of The Bronson Inn in Northfield. Galford proposed paying for the crew’s room and board with "script"—promissory notes to be redeemed once the federal NETSA payments began flowing. Dr. Bronson accepted. Similarly, the local general store agreed to accept Galford's script for food and supplies.
This arrangement—a Massachusetts innkeeper extending credit to a West Virginia sawyer on a handshake and a piece of paper—speaks volumes about the shared reality of the Depression. The "hard times" bridged the cultural gap between the Yankee host and the Appalachian guest.
VI. Operational Dynamics in the Connecticut River Valley
6.1 The Frick Steam Mill and "The Right Way"
The technological centerpiece of the Galford operation was the Frick sawmill. Powered by a steam boiler, this mill was robust, portable, and capable of handling the large white pine logs of New England.
Galford was meticulous about regulatory compliance. In West Virginia, regulations might have been looser, but in Massachusetts, he insisted on strict adherence to state laws. Grover Sheets, the crew member responsible for the boiler, was required to take a test and obtain a license from the State of Massachusetts. Galford’s philosophy was explicit: "There's a right way and a wrong way, and we're going to do it the right way". This professionalism helped dispel any potential local prejudice against the "hillbilly" workforce.
6.2 The Role of Horses in Glacial Terrain
While the 1930s saw the rise of mechanized tractors, the Galford operation relied heavily on draft horses, managed by teamsters Charlie and Lee McLaughlin of Huntersville, WV.
This reliance on horsepower was not merely traditional; it was tactically superior for the specific conditions of the New England salvage. The "blowdown" areas were chaotic tangles of trunks, root balls, and boulders (glacial till common in Massachusetts). Tractors of the era struggled to navigate these "jackstraw" piles without damaging the remaining young trees or getting stuck. Horses, guided by skilled teamsters like the McLaughlins, could thread through the debris, extracting logs with precision. The snippet notes that Charlie McLaughlin "took good care of his horses," boarding them at a local Northfield farm and living with them to ensure their health.
6.3 Wages and Welfare
The economic impact on the crew was immediate. The men earned 75 cents an hour. To put this in perspective, the minimum wage established by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 was 25 cents an hour. Galford was paying three times the federal minimum wage, plus providing housing at the Bronson Inn and healthcare coverage.
The health of the crew was monitored by Dr. Luster "Doc" McCutcheon, who traveled from Green Bank to Northfield periodically. This trans-regional medical care ensured that the workforce remained fit for the grueling labor. Remarkably, the operation recorded zero accidents during its 18-month duration—a statistical anomaly in the high-risk world of hurricane salvage, and a testament to the skill and discipline of the West Virginia crew.
VII. Social Convergence: Integration and Intermarriage
7.1 Living at The Bronson Inn
The Bronson Inn became the social hub for the West Virginians. Living in the center of Northfield, the men were not isolated in a remote forest camp (as was common in the WV logging boom) but were integrated into the daily life of the town. This proximity fostered interaction with the local populace.
The cultural exchange was significant. Northfield was a town influenced by the religious and educational legacy of Dwight L. Moody, home to the Northfield Seminary for Young Ladies and the Mount Hermon School for Boys. The arrival of rough-hewn loggers might have caused friction, but the historical record suggests a harmonious relationship. The Galford crew’s reputation for hard work and sobriety (at least on the job) garnered respect.
7.2 Romance and Genealogy
The most profound long-term social effect of the Galford Lumber Company’s presence in Northfield was the web of romantic connections that formed between the loggers and local Massachusetts women. As the documentary Out of the Storm narrates: "They came, they cut, they stacked, some of them married".
These were not isolated incidents. The dislocation of young men from West Virginia, combined with the surplus of social activity in a town recovering from disaster, led to numerous courtships. Some loggers chose to settle permanently in New England after the salvage operation concluded in June 1940, raising families that blended Appalachian and Yankee heritage. Others brought their new wives back to Pocahontas County.
This genealogical intertwining created a lasting "human bridge" between the two regions. Family reunions and oral histories in Pocahontas County continue to reference the "Northfield years," and descendants in Massachusetts trace their lineage back to the West Virginia sawyers.
7.3 The Seasonal Rhythm of Labor
The connection between the two places was maintained by a seasonal migration. In the summer of 1939, Galford did not force the men to stay in Massachusetts. Recognizing their dual identity as farmers, he transported the crew back to West Virginia to "put up the hay" on their own farms, continuing to pay their wages during the travel. They returned to Northfield to work through the winter. This respect for the agrarian calendar solidified the loyalty of the crew and ensured that the salvage operation did not destroy the farms back home by depriving them of labor at critical times.
VIII. Economic Legacies: Capital Injection and Survival
8.1 Impact on West Virginia
For Pocahontas County, the Northfield operation was a massive injection of capital. The wages earned in Massachusetts were remitted back to Green Bank and Huntersville, paying off debts, taxes, and mortgages that had accumulated during the Depression.
For Glen Galford personally, the gamble paid off spectacularly. He returned to West Virginia with enough capital to expand his business empire. By the time of his death in 1947, he owned five farms and multiple sawmills, and was recognized as a "prominent businessman in lumber, livestock and real estate". The narrative of the "Northfield Trip" became a story of triumph—a proof that mountaineer ingenuity could succeed on a national stage.
8.2 Impact on Massachusetts
For Northfield, the economic impact was equally vital. The cash flow from the Galford crew supported the Bronson Inn and local merchants during a lean economic period. More importantly, the removal of the timber restored the value of the land. By clearing the "slash," Galford’s men removed the fire hazard that threatened the town and prepared the forest for its next phase of growth.
The NETSA program, supported by crews like Galford’s, injected over $8.3 million into the hands of 13,000 New England landowners (mostly farmers), effectively saving many from bankruptcy.
IX. Ecological Legacy: The Making of the Modern Forest
9.1 The End of the White Pine Era
The 1938 hurricane and the subsequent salvage marked the end of the "old field" white pine dominance in central Massachusetts. The Galford Company harvested millions of board feet of pine, but they did not replant pine.
The ecological succession that followed was driven by the "understory." Beneath the towering pines, shade-tolerant hardwood seedlings—red oak, red maple, sugar maple, and black birch—had been waiting for decades. When the hurricane (and the loggers) removed the pine canopy, these hardwoods were released.
9.2 The "Leaf Peeper" Economy
This shift in species composition had an unintended but lucrative long-term consequence. The hardwood forest that grew up in the wake of the 1938 storm is the forest that provides New England with its world-famous autumn foliage today. The vibrant reds of the maples and the deep russets of the oaks replaced the evergreen monotony of the white pines.
Thus, the labor of the Galford crew helped lay the foundation for the modern tourism economy of Northfield and the Pioneer Valley. The "Leaf Peeper" industry, which brings billions of dollars to New England annually, is in part a legacy of the canopy turnover accelerated by the hurricane and formalized by the salvage sawyers.
X. Detailed Comparison of Long-Term Effects
XI. Conclusion
The story of the 1938 Hurricane and the Galford Lumber Company is a testament to the unexpected convergences created by disaster. The storm, a force of unparalleled destruction, created a vacuum that drew the struggling loggers of West Virginia into the heart of New England.
This was not a simple transaction of labor for wages. It was a complex sociological event where the "script" of the Depression—shared poverty and shared resilience—allowed a Massachusetts innkeeper to trust a West Virginia sawyer. It was a technological triumph where steam boilers and draft horses cleared the wreckage of a modern meteorological catastrophe.
The long-term effects are written on the land and in the bloodlines of the people. In Massachusetts, the mixed hardwood forests that blaze with color in October are a living monument to the white pines that fell in 1938 and were cleared by men like Grover Sheets and Charlie McLaughlin. In West Virginia, the farms that survived the Depression on "Yankee wages" remain a testament to Glen Galford’s gamble. And in the families that span both regions, the legacy of the "Great Trip North" endures—a story of how, out of the storm, a new and stronger community was forged.
Data Appendix: Key Operational Figures
| Metric | Detail | Source |
| Storm Date | September 21, 1938 | |
| Wind Speed | 121 mph sustained (Blue Hill), 186 mph gusts | |
| Timber Downed | 2.7 - 3.0 Billion Board Feet | |
| Primary Species | White Pine (Pinus strobus) - ~90% of blowdown | |
| Galford Arrival | January 1939 | |
| Crew Size | ~30-50 men | |
| Wage Rate | $0.75 / hour (plus room, board, healthcare) | |
| NETSA Price | ~$4.00 - $5.00 per 1,000 bd. ft. (stumpage paid to owners) | |
| Storage Method | Wet Storage (ponds) and Dry Storage (piles) | |
| Accident Rate | 0 accidents over 18 months |
This is an excellent foundation. You have successfully consolidated the "who, what, where, when, and why" of the event. You have moved past general hurricane history and established a specific, compelling narrative hook: the mass migration of a workforce from Appalachia to New England in the shadow of the Depression.
Now that you have the skeleton of the history established, the next phase is adding flesh, blood, and sensory detail to turn this factual account into a compelling narrative.
Here is a breakdown of recommended next steps for research and narrative development, structured to deepen the story you have already confirmed.
Phase 1: Primary Source Deep Dive (Targeting Specifics)
You have the big picture; now you need the granular details that make history feel alive.
1. The "Northfield Invasion" – Local Perspective: A quiet Massachusetts town suddenly hosting 40–50 West Virginian loggers is a massive cultural event.
Action: Search the archives of local Northfield newspapers (e.g., The Northfield Press or regional papers like The Greenfield Recorder-Gazette) from late 1938 to 1941.
What to look for:
Reports on the arrival of the "Galford crew." Were they welcomed as economic saviors or viewed with suspicion as outsiders?
Police blotters: Were there rowdy incidents at local taverns? Fights?
Social columns: Did the WV crew interact with locals at dances or churches?
Advertisements by Glen Galford looking for local labor or supplies.
2. The Bronson Inn: Since you know exactly where they lived, this is a crucial setting.
Action: Contact the Northfield Historical Society or local libraries.
What to look for: Photographs of the Bronson Inn around 1940. Floor plans? Menus? How did an inn handle suddenly housing and feeding 50 hungry loggers for two years? It likely transformed the business entirely.
3. The Pocahontas County Exodus – The Human Element: Who were these men? Leaving home for two years during the Depression was a major sacrifice and risk.
Action: Utilize genealogical databases (Ancestry, FamilySearch) focused on Pocahontas County, WV.
What to look for:
The 1940 Census: This is critical. The census was taken while they were up north. Look for Glen Galford and his crew enumerated in Northfield, MA. This will give you names, ages, marital status, and education levels of the actual workers.
Draft Cards (WWII): Men registering in 1940-1942 might list their employer as Galford in Northfield.
Phase 2: Contextual Texture (Sensory Details)
To make the reader feel like they are there, you need to understand the mechanics of the era.
1. The Mechanics of NETSA:
Research Goal: Understand how the Timber Salvage Administration actually worked on the ground.
Details needed: How were contractors like Galford paid? (By the board foot? By the hour?) What were the specifications for the lumber? The government paperwork must have been immense—how did a small WV operation handle federal bureaucracy?
2. The Logistics of the Move: Moving a sawmill operation in 1939 was not easy.
Research Goal: Determine how they physically got there.
Details needed: Did they use the burgeoning trucking industry, or did they ship equipment via rail? What was the condition of roads between WV and MA in 1939? (The Pennsylvania Turnpike didn't open until 1940; the interstate system didn't exist). The journey itself is part of the story.
3. The Environmental Reality:
Research Goal: Visuals of the work.
Details needed: Find photographs of the '38 hurricane blowdowns. The tangled messes of pine and oak were notoriously dangerous to log, often under incredible tension ("spring poles"). The work was far more hazardous than standard logging.
Phase 3: Narrative Arc Development (Drafting Strategy)
As you gather this new research, begin structuring your narrative. Based on what you have established, here is a potential narrative arc:
Part I: The Twin Disasters
Set the scene in depression-era Pocahontas County. The economic stagnation.
Cut to New England: The terrifying arrival of the '38 Hurricane (the "Long Island Express"). The immediate aftermath—a landscape destroyed.
Part II: The Opportunity and the Exodus (1939)
The creation of NETSA. The call goes out for loggers because New England doesn't have enough manpower for the scale of the disaster.
Glen Galford makes the decision. The logistics of packing up a mill and convinced 50 men to leave their families for an unknown territory. The difficult journey north.
Part III: The Northfield Years (1939–1941)
Arrival: The culture clash. Appalachia meets New England academia/stoicism. The scene at the Bronson Inn.
The Work: The brutal reality of salvage logging in freezing NE winters versus WV winters. The danger. The pressure to produce for NETSA.
Community: How the two groups eventually learned to coexist (or didn't).
Part IV: The Return and Legacy
The job finishes as the shadow of WWII approaches (1941). The crew returns to WV with money in their pockets, changed by the experience. The lasting impact on Northfield and the memory in Pocahontas County.
Summary of immediate next steps:
Find the 1940 Census records for Northfield, MA, to identify the specific crew members.
Search Northfield-area newspaper archives from 1939 for mentions of their arrival.

