American Forest Products Company
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American Forest Products Corporation (AFPC) was a
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company initially producing wooden boxes and shipping materials but expanding into the timber, sawmill, and lumber industries. The company began in the 1920s and operated under the same leadership until it was sold to the
Bendix Corporation Bendix Corporation is an American manufacturing and engineering company which, during various times in its existence, made automotive brake shoes and systems, vacuum tubes, aircraft brakes, aeronautical hydraulics and electric power systems, av ...
in 1969.


History

The company began in 1910 in
Stockton, California Stockton is a city in and the county seat of San Joaquin County, California, San Joaquin County in the Central Valley (California), Central Valley of the U.S. state of California. Stockton was founded by Carlos Maria Weber in 1849 after he acquir ...
as the Stockton Manufacturing Company, a joint effort of Horace Tartar and Clarence Albert Webster. The company produced wooden boxes used primarily by fruit growers and canners and
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, the material of shipping strips which were used to keep boxes from shifting in transit. In 1911, the company was renamed the Stockton Box Company. Tartar and Webster incorporated in 1918 and later included their legal partner, Walter S. Johnson, to become Tartar, Webster and Johnson, Inc. The box company expanded in the 1920s to include timber, saw mills and lumber. The company name became the American Forest Products Corporation. A listing of corporate holdings compiled in 1944 included: *American Box Company, San Francisco, Stockton and Diamond Springs, CA, Sprague River, Oregon *Stockton Box Company, Stockton, CA *Wetsel Mill, Omo Ranch, CA *Mt. Whitney Lumber Company, Johnsondale, CA *Associated Lumber and Box company, Dorris and North Fork, CA *Blagen Lumber Company, White Pine, CA *Calaveras Forest Products Corp, Sandy Gulch and Toyon, CA *General Box Distributor, San Jose and Fresno, CA *Blyes-Jamison Lumber, Fresno, CA *Harbor Box and Lumber Company, Los Angeles, CA *Underwood Lumber, Lakeview, Oregon In 1963, AFPC had 4 sawmills and of timberland in Northern California, and employed over 4000 workers in 49 location in 16 states. AFPC was acquired by the Bendix Corporation in 1969 as Bendix sought to diversify outside its core automobile and defense business. The company was renamed Bendix Forest Products Company (BFPC). Following this purchase, in the early 1970s Bendix acquired the
recreational vehicle A recreational vehicle, often abbreviated as RV, is a motor vehicle or trailer that includes living quarters designed for accommodation. Types of RVs include motorhomes, campervans, coaches, caravans (also known as travel trailers and camper ...
and
mobile home A mobile home (also known as a house trailer, park home, trailer, or trailer home) is a prefabricated structure, built in a factory on a permanently attached chassis before being transported to site (either by being towed or on a trailer). Us ...
businesses of the troubled
Boise Cascade Corporation Boise Cascade Company (), which uses the trade name Boise Cascade, is a North American manufacturer of wood products and wholesale distributor of building materials, headquartered in Boise, Idaho. with sales over $7.9 billion in 2021, it is trad ...
which it reorganized as Bendix Home Systems expecting to see synergies between the lumber produced by BFPC and the new division. However, these synergies failed to materialize to the extent anticipated and Bendix sold off its Home Systems operations by the early 1980s. In another attempt to maximize benefit from BFPC, Bendix acquired
Caradco Caradco is the oldest manufacturer of wooden windows and sliding glass doors in the United States. Today part of the JELD-WEN Company, Caradco traces its history back to 1856. History The company was founded in Dubuque, Iowa. For many years i ...
, a wooden window manufacturer, from Scovill Inc. in 1979 and around the same time, acquired builders' supply outlet Bass and Company. But, benefit from these acquisitions was never realized as Bendix sold BFPC in 1981 to
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts KKR & Co. Inc., also known as Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., is an American global investment company that manages multiple alternative asset classes, including private equity, energy, infrastructure, real estate, credit, and, through its strate ...
(KKR) for , a significant premium over its purchase price. Following its sale to KKR, the company was reorganized again under the name American Forest Products.
Georgia-Pacific Georgia-Pacific LLC is an American pulp and paper company based in Atlanta, Georgia, and is one of the world's largest manufacturers and distributors of tissue, pulp, paper, toilet and paper towel dispensers, packaging, building products and r ...
acquired AFPC in 1988.


References

{{reflist Defunct manufacturing companies based in California Bendix Corporation Georgia-Pacific