Inscription
H. J. Lutcher and G. B. Moore moved their lumber operations from Pennsylvania and established a headquarters here in 1877. Over the next several decades they built a timber empire with vast holdings in Texas and Louisiana and an extensive network of sawmills, railroads, warehouses, canals, dock facilities, and transport ships.
The company erected a mission style headquarters here in 1913. Lutcher and Moore and their successors Dr. E. W. Brown and William H. Stark amassed great wealth and founded many of Orange County's cultural institutions. The company ceased operations in the early 1930s. Sesquicentennial of Texas Statehood 1845-1995
Location
Sources
More markers in Orange
The Emmett Beuhler House
Orange, TX
Emmett Beuhler (1853-1943), a native of Alsace-Lorraine, came here in the 1880s, during the lumbering boom.
Dr. Samuel M. Brown
Orange, TX
(1836-1887) South Carolina native Samuel M. Brown served with distinction as a surgeon in the Confederate army during the Civil War.
John Cole Homestead
Mauriceville, TX
Pioneer settler John Cole (1805-75) migrated to Texas in 1828.
Site of End of the Line Station
Orange, TX
The original charter for a rail line through the Orange area was granted to the Sabine and Galveston Railroad and Lumber Company in 1856.
First National Bank of Orange
Orange, TX
Until the industrial revolution reached Orange in the late 1880s, most banking needs in the area were handled through Galveston.
