About us
Established in 1909, we are a specialty lumber yard providing access to over 100 domestic and exotic hardwood species, and have the edge with our top-quality plywood and veneer products.
About Us
A SPECIALTY
LUMBERYARD
The Longest Running Hardwood Lumber Company in Michigan
Established in 1909, we are a specialty lumber yard providing access to over 100 domestic and exotic hardwood species, and have the edge with our top-quality plywood and veneer products.
Known for offering a unique combination of hardwoods, plywood, woodworking machinery, supplies, and hardware, our customers often claim they find the resources for their projects through us they can't find anywhere else.
The summer of 2007, founder L.L. Johnson's great grandsons, brothers Mark and Tim Johnson, took over the reins to the lumber mill in time to usher the company into their 100th year of business. Their fourth generation ownership bestowed the company with another notable achievement. Only 3% of family owned businesses in the U.S. survive to the fourth generation.
A COMPANY STARTED BY ONE…BUILT BY MANY
OUR 100 YEAR TIMELINE
IT ALL STARTED WITH RAILROAD TIES & CROSSING PLANKS
By 1922, after the railroad grew beyond the state, L.L. decided to move his operation to Eaton County and established a permanent circular sawmill and planing mill in Charlotte. Now his operation was closer to the growing automobile businesses in Lansing and Flint, which needed lumber for making cars and trucks. During the late 1920s, however, when steel started to replace wood in cars, L.L. looked to the furniture factories of Grand Rapids as a new market for the lumber he was harvesting.
At the same time, his son Darrel graduated from Albion College and worked for a lumber company in Ohio, gaining valuable experience about the business. By 1928, Darrel returned to Michigan to become a partner with his dad. Together they planned how to grow their business and meet the growing demand of lumber from the furniture factories in Grand Rapids. Bleached maple furniture was all the rage and fueled the booming furniture business of the state. To meet this growing market for maple, L.L. and Darrel replaced their original circular saw with a new band sawmill, built dry kilns, and established warehouse facilities.
1909 LUMBER CAMP LIFE
When the fiddle had stopped singing Laura called out softly, “What are days of auld lang syne, Pa?”
“They are the days of a long time ago, Laura,” Pa said. “Go to sleep, now.”
Having a great-grandfather, L.L. Johnson, who was a lumberjack in the early 1900s makes Michigan’s lumber history come to life for our family. Beginning in 1909, our great-grandfather, L.L, and his men led a nomadic lifestyle harvesting lumber. The logging crew would move right to the woodlot of a farm, drill a well, and set up shanties as their living quarters. L.L. would often purchase the farms, fix and repair them while harvesting the timber. Then sell the farms as they moved on to the next woodlot, never letting too much sawdust gather at their feet.
The image of the lumberjack was often romanticized in illustrations and stories such as the tales of Paul Bunyan. But the actual life of a logger was very dangerous, filled with long, backbreaking days. Logging was done in the dead of winter when farmer labor was available. Trees were felled with muscle-powered crosscut saws. Lumber and logs were hauled about on hulking, horse-drawn sleds.
The day for a lumberjack began before dawn. Breakfast was served while it was still dark so the men could eat and be out in the woods ready to work at the first crack of daylight. Lunch and dinner would be brought out into the woods where the men were working. Lumberjacks would work until dark, then walk back to camp for supper. It was not unusual for breakfast to be served at four or five a.m., lunch at nine, dinner at two-thirty, and supper at eight, with lights out at nine.
The camp cook and his helper, often referred to as ‘cookee’, were vital members of a lumber camp crew. Whether or not our great-grandpa and other camp bosses were able to hire a full crew was largely dependent on the cooking. If it wasn’t tasty enough or plentiful enough, lumberjacks were known to walk off the job. The cook and cookee worked 16 to 17 hour days, seven days a week. Their day would begin no later than 3 a.m. grinding coffee beans. It would take up to an hour to grind enough coffee for 25 to 30 men.
Breakfast might consist of fried potatoes, beans, pancakes with molasses syrup or gravy, hot biscuits, coffee, pork sausages and other meats. Lunch was eaten in the woods. A campfire would be set to boil tea and food would be placed around the fire for the men to dish up and eat quickly before it had a chance to freeze on their tin plates.
Supper was more substantial with pork and beans, potatoes, meat and gravy. For dessert there were usually dried fruit pies -- raisin, and dried apple. “Vinegar pie” was often served.
Many is the impression that lumberjacks were rough, rowdy, loud, and burly, up until all hours of the night drinking, singing, and storytelling. But that was only after the logging season was done in the spring. Several historical entries report of strict camp rules such as no talking while eating, and early lights out. Good food, long grueling days, strict rules of conduct -- that was life in a logging camp in 1909.
CHARLOTTE MAN DRIVES TRUCK A MILLION MILES IN 40 YEARS
But 64-year-old Diamond, a native of Charlotte, is a rather retiring sort of person and rather reluctant to talk about the achievements. His employers at the L.L. Johnson Lumber Co., however, are proud of his record.
Born in Charlotte, the son of the late Fred and Nellie (Midland) Diamond, Murray secured his education in the Bush school and Charlotte public schools. At an early age, however, he began working, right at the outset, in the lumber business.
When he was only 16 years old Mr. Diamond began driving a team of horses, drawing logs for the Ezra Huber sawmill at Center Eaton. The fall and early winter of 1922 found him doing the same for Bert Lee, bringing logs into Charlotte. But when a horse fell and broke a leg, Murray found himself out of work.
That was the year L.L. Johnson, who had operated sawmills between Albion and Charlotte for a decade or more, decided to make Charlotte the base of his expanding hardwood lumber operations. Mr. Diamond applied to him for a job -- and got it as a truck driver.
When he first went to work for the Johnson company, Mr. Diamond hauled both logs to the mill and lumber to customers. in recent years his work has consisted of hauling lumber to the furniture trade in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, most of his trips enabling him to be back home by nightfall. He resides at 538 S. Sheldon with his wife, the former Miss Cora Henderson.
To hear Mr. Diamond tell it, however, one suspects an employee could do little less than give his best to the firm. His comment: “Johnson’s has always been a great company to work for, and I have always been satisfied with my employer. There may be some just as good, certainly there are none better.”
SIX UNITS BATTLE LUMBER STORE FIRE
Hundreds of onlookers gathered around the burning building as flames shot into the air.
SPECIAL NOTE: The following article appeared in the April 15, 1989 edition of the South Bend Tribune.
TERRENCE BLAND staff writer
SOUTH BEND -- Six area fire departments Friday night battled a fire that destroyed the showroom of Johnson’s Workbench, 51315 U.S. 33 N., about one-quarter mile north of Auten Road in Clay Twp.
Clay Twp. Fire Chief Robert Lindzy estimated loss of the showroom would total at least $100,000.
Lindzy said firefighters were likely to remain at the scene until early this morning.
The fire first was seen about 8:45 p.m. Friday by a man who stopped at Morris Video, just south of Johnson’s, and told an employee there to call firefighters. Tony Long, who works at the video store, said he walked outside and saw flames creeping through the peak of the showroom roof. Long said after he called emergency dispatchers, “it only took 15 minutes and it was up.”
Bill Edmondson, who had just rented some videotapes from Morris, said, “It was like a string of firecrackers” when heavy flames began igniting cans of wood stain and paint inside the showroom. Long said he “didn’t see anyone around the building at all when he walked outside to investigate the fire.
The showroom of the specialty lumber store was engulfed in flames when Clay Twp. firefighters arrived at the scene. Additional assistance was called for immediately, and firefighters arrived from German, Portage, and Harris townships in St. Joseph County and Howard and Niles townships in Berrien County. The store is just south of the Michigan state line. Manpower also was brought in from the University of Notre Dame Fire Department. A cause of the fire had not been determined by early this morning.
Lindzy indicated the fire probably had been smoldering for some time before it was discovered which he said was unusual since the showroom faces a heavily traveled highway. Lindzy said when firefighters arrived, they concentrated their efforts on saving the storage portion of the building, directly west of, or behind, the showroom. Firefighters were able to attack the fire from the west and push it out away from the storage room which, if ignited, would have caused even more extensive damage, according to Lindzy.
“There’s a fire wall there, but they actually stopped (the fire) before it got to the fire wall,” Lindzy said, referring to the protective barrier that separates the show room from the storage room.
The blaze was brought under control in about 45 minutes, Lindzy said. Tired firefighters continued to pour water on smoldering timbers late into the night.
Clay Twp. Lt. Jim Hummell said the store is a specialty store that sells stains, woodworking material and fine lumber for craftsmen. Hummell said flames were shooting out the roof of a pole-type structure when he arrived. Hummell, who was operating a large semi-truck tanker at the scene, estimated 30,000 gallons of water were poured on the fire by about 9:30 p.m., and much more water was expected to be used.
“That was our main concern, water supply,” Hummell said.
Hundreds of onlookers gathered around the burning building as flames shot into the air, tossing burning embers and thick smoke high into the evening sky. County and state police blocked traffic at U.S. 33 and Auten and at intersecting roads north as hundreds of feet of hose were strewn across the highway. Tanker trucks drove to and from the scene frequently in an effort to keep the water supply adequate.
“They’ve done a helluva job,” Lindzy said of the more than 40 firefighters battling the blaze.
About 8:30 p.m. Friday, Penn North and Penn South fire units in northeastern St. Joseph County were dispatched to assist Osceola firefighters battling a fire in a two-story house at Vistula and Beech roads. Information about that fire was not available early today. Officials said there were no problems fighting both fires at the same time because several adjacent fire departments provided mutual aid to the Clay and Osceola fire departments.
A KNACK FOR INVENTIVENESS
Since L.L. Johnson Lumber Mfg. Co. began in 1909, the company met with many transformations over the years. As the decade of the 1960s approached, the scene was being set for the biggest expansion in the company’s history. Dick Johnson entered the company business in June of 1953 by grading lumber. He was joined by his brother Bob, in 1956, and two years later by the youngest brother, Ted.
The era of the third generation of Johnsons is best summed up as pioneers in engineering. Modernization began in 1959, when an air electric carriage was installed to handle the burdensome logs during the cutting operation. Prior to that, a worker “rode” the carriage all day long, setting the cutting thickness. A new edger, linebar resaw, and 17-saw trimmer were also installed. The latter has the capability of trimming boards to the exact length, and cutting out the unwanted portions of a board.
Then in 1962, a guide light was put into operation on the edger. Johnson Lumber was a pioneer in the creation of this device. While it means little to the average customer, a guideline is a real boon for the mill operator. It allows the operator to see precisely where the edge of the board is to be ripped to eliminate bark, and knots, giving a straight edge and creating a higher quality product. As a result, waste is substantially reduced.
That same year, two of the Johnson brothers, Dick and Ted, demonstrated a knack for inventiveness by designing a 40-foot diameter revolving round table for sorting lumber housed inside an 80-foot round building, the revolving round table uses a tenth of the power needed for the conventional green chains found in most mills.
At that time, the round building used for sorting lumber was a new innovation for the hardwood lumber industry. Business owners from around the country would travel to Charlotte, Michigan for the expressed purpose of viewing Johnson Lumber’s achievement.
Where we are
One of the most versatile sheet goods, hardwood plywood is used to construct everything from fine furniture and cabinets to shelving. It is quite resistant to shrinking, twisting, warping and cracking. We have it available in several thicknesses and a wide variety of species.
Text or Call: