The Sawmill
10m
John P. Bosum remembers the sawmill as more than just a place of work; it was a living part of the community, a heartbeat of industry, learning, and shared purpose during his youth. When he speaks of it now, his voice carries both warmth and sorrow, as though the memory still flickers like embers beneath the surface. The sawmill stood near the edge of the settlement, its steady hum echoing through the trees, a sound so familiar that it blended naturally with the wind and the calls of birds. For a young John, it was a place of curiosity and awe—a towering structure of wood, steel, and motion where logs from the land were transformed into something useful for homes, sleds, and community buildings.
He recalls the smell first: fresh-cut spruce and pine, sharp and clean, mixed with oil and sawdust. The air around the mill was always alive, filled with drifting wood shavings that clung to clothes and hair. Older men worked there, some of them relatives, others respected community members whose strength and skill John admired. Watching them taught him lessons without words—about responsibility, patience, and respect for hard work. The sawmill was not just about lumber; it was about cooperation, about providing for families, about using the gifts of the land wisely.
The day the sawmill burned is etched into John’s memory with startling clarity. He remembers the alarm spreading faster than any spoken message—people running, voices raised, the sudden smell of smoke cutting through the familiar scent of wood. Flames rose quickly, fed by dry lumber and sawdust, turning the sky dark with thick, rolling smoke. The sound was overwhelming: the crackle of fire, the groan of beams giving way, the shouts of people trying desperately to help, even as they knew the fire was too strong to stop.
As a young person, John felt a deep confusion and helplessness. He watched adults who were usually calm and steady stand silently, their faces lit by firelight, knowing they were witnessing the loss of something irreplaceable. The mill collapsed in stages, sparks flying upward like fiery snow, each one seeming to carry a piece of the community’s labor and history with it. It was not just a building burning—it was jobs, shared memories, and future plans disappearing into ash.
In the days that followed, the absence of the sawmill was heavy. The familiar hum was gone, replaced by an unsettling quiet. Charred remains stood where the mill once worked day and night, a stark reminder of how quickly things could change. Yet John also remembers something else rising from the loss: resilience. People gathered, talked, supported one another, and found new ways to move forward. The fire became a lesson in impermanence, but also in strength.
Now, when John P. Bosum recalls the sawmill, his memory is layered—there is pride in what it represented, sadness for what was lost, and gratitude for what it taught him. The fire did not erase the sawmill’s importance; instead, it fixed it forever in his story. It remains a symbol of a time when community and land were closely bound by work, and when a young boy learned that even in destruction, there are lessons that endure, carried forward through memory and storytelling.