Union Camp Corporation
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Union Camp Corporation was an American pulp and paper company and a private owner of timberland in the United States. In 1999 it was acquired by International Paper.
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[edit] Company creation
Union Camp came about through the merger of the Union Bag and Paper Company and the Camp Manufacturing Company. Each of these family owned companies had unique histories that led to the ultimate success of Union Camp until it was acquired by International paper.
[edit] Union Bag and Paper Company
The Union Bag and Paper Company's history dates back to 1881 where it began as the Union Paper Bag Machine Company in Bethlehem Pennsylvania.[1]
[edit] Camp Manufacturing Company
The Camp Manufacturing Company was founded in 1887 by 3 local Camp Brothers from Franklin, Virginia. Paul Douglas Camp(President), James Leonidas Camp(Vice-president) and Robert Judson Camp(secretary-treasurer) purchased a small sawmill on the outskirts of Franklin.The sawmill was purchased from Dr. Jimmy Jordan of Como, North Carolina.Under Dr. Jim Jordan,Camp Manufacturing Company of Franklin prospered and steadily increased in volume. By 1949 it utilized four log trucks, each with several times the load capacity of the first one. The business was grossing about $90 thousand a year.
With their new sawmill, the began expanding it and over the next 20 years experienced rapid growth. After a bout with near bankruptcy in 1907, the brothers borrowed the money necessary to continue operations. With the onset of World War I, the increased demand for lumber brought the company back to financial success. By 1918, the success of the company was obvious through the observations of the local community Franklin. With the stimulated economy, "Franklin has become a booming wartime village..."[2] In 1925, with the passing of the final first generation Camps, the company was passed on to the second generation. This new generation brought the company into the paper production industry, starting with brown packaging paper in 1938 and eventually producing specialty bleached paper in the 1950s. By the mid 1950s, the industry competition was growing fierce with onset of extensive mergers within the industry and the Camp family needed resources to expand their capital intensive paper production. Until this time, the Camp family was in possession of 74% of slightly over a million shares of their company.[3] Reluctant to forfeit this control by becoming a publicly-traded company, the Camp family looked for other avenues. After meeting with several potential buyers, many who were disgusted at Hugh Camps high asking price, a buyer was found.[4]
[edit] The merger
In May of 1956, the merger between the 2 companies came together. With Union Bag company having sales of $123,031,000 and owning over a million acres (4,000 km²) of timber, it was surprising that the Camps negotiated as equals with the Calders, when the Camps had a fraction of the sales and property with $27,675,225 in sales and 240,000 acres (970 km²) of timber.[5] After months of negotiaions, and a final offering to the Camp shareholders of 1.75 shares for every share owned, a deal was stuck. On 13 July 1956 the merger was completed and the Union Bag-Camp Paper company was born.[6]
[edit] From merger to merger
[edit] The final days
In 1999, the Union Camp Corporation was acquired by International Paper. At the time it was referred to at that time as a "merger," but was actually a takeover. The Union Camp chairman at that time had actually sold another paper company to International Paper in the mid-1980's, when he was also in charge of that company. He finally retired from International Paper's Board of Directors in late 2006.
[edit] Sources
- Rouse, Parke Jr., The Timber Tycoons - The Camp Families of Virginia and Florida, and their empire, 1887-1987. The William Byrd Press, 1988. OCLC 48020084.