| Abstract: | Wilson Martindale Compton (1890-1967) held a leadership role at the National Lumber Manufacturers Association from 1918 to 1944. Compton was one of the most prominent of all trade association leaders throughout the 1920s and 1930s. |
| The collection includes correspondence; copies of speeches, addresses, and articles; minutes of meetings; and by-laws of organizations. The materials relate to Compton's career as a leader in the lumber and manufacturing industries, and much of the collection pertains to such forest industry organizations as NLMA (National Lumber Manufacturers Association), AFPI (American Forest Products Industries), TECO (Timber Engineering Company), and AFA (American Forestry Association). Prominent individuals referred to in the papers include Frank George Wisner, G.W. Dulany, Jr., and John W. Watzek. | |
| Title: | Wilson Martindale Compton Papers, 1918 - 1966 |
| Creator: | Compton, Wilson Martindale, 1890-1967 |
| Repository: | Forest History Society Library and Archives |
| Call Number: | 3897 |
| Language of Material: | Material in English |
| Extent: | 1.0 linear feet (2 archival boxes) |
Wilson Martindale Compton (1890-1967) held a leadership role at the National Lumber Manufacturers Association from 1918 to 1944. Compton was one of the most prominent of all trade association leaders throughout the 1920s and 1930s.
Compton was born in Wooster, Ohio, on October 15, 1890. He attended the College of Wooster and Princeton University, where he earned a Ph.D. degree in the department of history, politics, and economics. Compton was a professor of economics at Dartmouth for one year prior to his accepting an appointment with the Federal Trade Commission. While Compton studied for a law degree in the 1910s, he published in various professional journals a number of articles on the economic difficulties of the lumber industry, earning a reputation as an authority on the subject. In 1918 the newly reorganized National Lumber Manufacturers Association (NLMA) asked Compton to serve as the association's first secretary-manager. He served in that capacity until 1944, when he left the organization to become president of Washington State College in Pullman, Washington. In 1951 he resigned from that position to accept a position with the U.S. State Department's policy planning staff. He left this job just two years later due to conflicting differences with Senator Joseph McCarthy. Compton served as director of the Council for Financial Aid to Education until his retirement in 1959. His retirement years were spent in his home town, Wooster, Ohio. Compton died on March 7, 1967.
While employed by the National Lumber Manufacturers Association (NLMA), Compton turned the NLMA into a profitable, prominent organization that came to wield great power within the lumber industry. Compton became a spokesman for organized lumbermen, helping to resolve demobilization problems after the First World War Compton worked to lessen competitive rivalries in the lumber industry while focusing the attention of the lumber industry on national problems. Compton worked openly with numerous government agencies, such as the U.S. Forest Service, in order to produce cooperative programs (public and private) that were of benefit to the lumber industry. Compton strengthened and broadened the association's public relations and trade promotion programs; expanded its technical, research, and engineering capabilities; and increased the efficiency of the association's fire insurance and lumber standards. He formed both American Forest Products Industries (AFPI) and the Timber Engineering Company (TECO) as subsidiaries of the national association. Under his guidance, the NLMA earned a very important role in the nation's power structure, increasing its influence among lumbermen and policy makers alike.
Wilson Martindale Compton was one of the most prominent of all trade association leaders throughout the 1920s and 1930s. He continued to wield power in his profession in the following decades. For instance, he was instrumental in drafting the 1944 "Bailey Amendment" in an attempt to improve tax standards within the industry. Compton enjoyed the utmost respect of his peers until his death in 1967.
[For further information on Wilson Compton, NLMA, AFPI, or TECO, consult the Encyclopedia of American Forest and Conservation History (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1983; Richard C. Davis, ed.).]
The collection includes correspondence; copies of speeches, addresses, and articles; minutes of meetings; and by-laws of organizations. The materials relate to Compton's career as a leader in the lumber and manufacturing industries, and much of the collection pertains to such forest industry organizations as NLMA (National Lumber Manufacturers Association), AFPI (American Forest Products Industries), TECO (Timber Engineering Company), and AFA (American Forestry Association). Prominent individuals referred to in the papers include Frank George Wisner, G.W. Dulany, Jr., and John W. Watzek. The records are arranged in reverse chronological order.
1. Correspondence, Speeches, Addresses, Articles, and Organizational Materials, 1918-1965
No restrictions.
The nature of the Forest History Society's archival holdings means that copyright or other information about restrictions may be difficult or even impossible to determine despite reasonable efforts. The Forest History Society claims only physical ownership of most archival materials.
The materials from our collections are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study, pursuant to U.S. Copyright law. The user must assume full responsibility for any use of the materials, including but not limited to, infringement of copyright and publication rights of reproduced materials. Any materials used for academic research or otherwise should be fully credited with the source.
[Identification of item], Wilson Martindale Compton Papers, Library and Archives, Forest History Society, Durham, NC, USA.
Received from Catherine Compton Chase (Mrs. Sherret S. Chase; daughter of Wilson Compton) in May 1978. Additional materials received from Catherine Compton Chase in April 1992, May 1994, and November 1994.
Processed by Michele Justice, April 1997
Encoded by Amanda Ross, September 2008
Funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission supported the encoding of this finding aid. Support for digitization and outreach provided by the Alvin J. Huss Endowment.