{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026page=1"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":null,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":1,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":1,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":true}},"data":[{"id":"vihi_vih00020","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979","creator":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00020#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Conger, Edwin Fisher\n","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00020#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"The Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and electrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company and the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) figure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's first endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive timber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and philanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia. ","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00020#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vihi_vih00020","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00020","_root_":"vihi_vih00020","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00020","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00020.xml","title_ssm":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"title_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 C7604 a\n"],"text":["Mss1 C7604 a\n","Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979","Creosote.",".","Collection is open to research.\n","\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n","\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. "," Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice."," He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974.","Processed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n","\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).","\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.","Also, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.","Also, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.","Also, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.","Lastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.","The first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). "," Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)","Edwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.","\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.","Edwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n","The files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n","Perhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n","The files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n","As noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n","The materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n","Edwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        ","Edwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        ","The largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        ","One of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        ","This series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n","There are no restrictions.\n","The Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n","E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence.","Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974.","English\n"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 C7604 a\n"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"collection_title_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"collection_ssim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"creator_ssm":["Conger, Edwin Fisher\n"],"creator_ssim":["Conger, Edwin Fisher\n"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of the estate of Vivion Conger LeBow, Arlington, Va., in 2007. Accessioned September 30, 2013.\n"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Creosote."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Creosote."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["."],"extent_ssm":["3 linear feet (165 Folders)"],"extent_tesim":["3 linear feet (165 Folders)"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCollection is open to research.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions\n"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Collection is open to research.\n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement\n"],"arrangement_tesim":["\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information\n"],"bioghist_tesim":["\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. "," Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice."," He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eEdwin Fisher Conger papers, 1900-1979 (Mss1 C7604 a), Virginia Historical  , Accession # Mss1 C7604 a, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA.\u003c!-- Add your institution's citation information --\u003e\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger papers, 1900-1979 (Mss1 C7604 a), Virginia Historical  , Accession # Mss1 C7604 a, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information\n"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOne of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content\n"],"scopecontent_tesim":["\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).","\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.","Also, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.","Also, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.","Also, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.","Lastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.","The first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). "," Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)","Edwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.","\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.","Edwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n","The files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n","Perhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n","The files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n","As noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n","The materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n","Edwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        ","Edwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        ","The largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        ","One of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        ","This series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions.\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n"],"names_ssim":["E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence.","Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974."],"corpname_ssim":["E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence."],"persname_ssim":["Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974."],"language_ssim":["English\n"],"total_component_count_is":173,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T18:52:57.653Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vihi_vih00020","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00020","_root_":"vihi_vih00020","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00020","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00020.xml","title_ssm":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"title_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 C7604 a\n"],"text":["Mss1 C7604 a\n","Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979","Creosote.",".","Collection is open to research.\n","\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n","\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. "," Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice."," He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974.","Processed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n","\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).","\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.","Also, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.","Also, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.","Also, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.","Lastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.","The first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). "," Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)","Edwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.","\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.","Edwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n","The files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n","Perhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n","The files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n","As noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n","The materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n","Edwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        ","Edwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        ","The largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        ","One of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        ","This series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n","There are no restrictions.\n","The Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n","E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence.","Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974.","English\n"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 C7604 a\n"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"collection_title_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"collection_ssim":["Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"creator_ssm":["Conger, Edwin Fisher\n"],"creator_ssim":["Conger, Edwin Fisher\n"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of the estate of Vivion Conger LeBow, Arlington, Va., in 2007. Accessioned September 30, 2013.\n"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Creosote."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Creosote."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["."],"extent_ssm":["3 linear feet (165 Folders)"],"extent_tesim":["3 linear feet (165 Folders)"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCollection is open to research.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions\n"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Collection is open to research.\n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement\n"],"arrangement_tesim":["\nDivided into series as follows: Series 1. Edwin F. Conger, Education and\nProfessional Life; Series 2. E.F. Conger Company; Series 3. Norfolk Creosoting\nCompany; Series 4. Piedmont Company; Series 5. Edwin F. Conger personal files;\nand Series 6. Conger Family Personal Files\n"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information\n"],"bioghist_tesim":["\nNew Jersey native Edwin Fisher Conger became intrigued with forestry as a child\nand learned much from his lumberman father, especially in regard to the growth,\nharvesting and uses of chestnut poles and timber. Beginning in 1909, he attended\nthe Biltmore Forest School, on the famous Biltmore Estate in North Carolina,\nwhere he came under the life-long influence of German forester Dr. Charles Alwin\nSchenck, the chief instructor there. Graduating in 1910, Conger secured a\nposition with the Western Electric Company, where he put in long hours as a\nchestnut pole inspector. During this period he also became acquainted with the\nprocesses of pole and timber preservation through the application of a mixture\nof chemicals known as creosote. "," Around 1915 he went to work for Lowesville\nLumber Company in Lynchburg, and eventually took over the firm and recreated it\nas E. F. Conger Creosoting Company, whose main client initially proved to be\nelements of the Bell Telephone System. Conger set up treatment plants in Shipman\nand Natural Bridge, Virginia, and eventually in Waynesboro, which ultimately led\nto his purchase of the Virginia Creosoting Company in Culpeper. A chestnut\nblight in the 1920s led to the closing of two of the treating plants in\nVirginia, but with continued demand from the telephone and power companies\noperating on the east coast of the United States, Conger purchased the Piedmont\nWood Preserving Company, which operated a pressure-treating plant in Augusta,\nGeorgia, in 1930, followed by the purchase of the Norfolk Creosoting Company in\n1936, giving Conger a facility on deep water with the potential for coastwise\nand export trade. The latter he sold in the 1940s and used the proceeds to\npurchase Hitchcock Woods and the Cedar Creek Farm near Aiken, South Carolina.\nThese 14,000 acres provided Conger with ample resources for his products, but he\nharvested wisely and committed to reforestation well before that was a general\nenvironmental practice."," He also developed contracts with the U.S. government to\nharvest chestnut poles from national forests in the eastern part of the country.\nGradually, Conger got out of the creosoting business, having already converted\nPiedmont Wood Preserving simply to the Piedmont Company, divesting himself of\nthe plant in Augusta and the company's extensive series of contracts in 1951,\nand converting the operation largely into an investments holding firm. He\nlikewise sold off the E. F. Conger Company in the early 1950s to a newly\nconstituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C.,\nincluding distribution yards in Connecticut, Georgia, and Virginia; became a\nforestry consultant living in Staunton, Virginia; and developed a forestry\ncenter on his lands in South Carolina, partly in tribute to the work of his\nmentor, Dr. Charles Schenck. In later life, he served as a bank president in\nCharlottesville and was a generous philanthropist, supporting a number of\norganizations in Piedmont Virginia before his death in 1974."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eEdwin Fisher Conger papers, 1900-1979 (Mss1 C7604 a), Virginia Historical  , Accession # Mss1 C7604 a, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA.\u003c!-- Add your institution's citation information --\u003e\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Edwin Fisher Conger papers, 1900-1979 (Mss1 C7604 a), Virginia Historical  , Accession # Mss1 C7604 a, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, VA."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eProcessed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information\n"],"processinfo_tesim":["Processed under the auspices of a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)\n"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOne of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content\n"],"scopecontent_tesim":["\nThis collection contains materials regarding the education and career in\nforestry and treated pole production of Edwin F. Conger, including an\nautobiography, research materials, and a photograph album relating to pole\nharvesting and preservation treatment (including images of operations at the\nVirginia Creosoting Company plant in Culpeper, Va., Norfolk Creosoting Company\nat Norfolk, Va., E.F. Conger Creosoting Company at Waynesboro, Va., and the\nPiedmont Company at Augusta, Ga., as well as pictures of Conger's teacher and\nlifelong mentor, Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck).","\nAlso, includes materials (primarily photographs of operations and\npole-production plants) of E. F. Conger Creosoting Company (later simply the E.\nF. Conger Company), headquartered in Staunton, Va., but with chief operations at\nWaynesboro, Va. Files include images of Edwin F. Conger at the company\nheadquarters in Staunton.","Also, includes records of the Norfolk Creosoting Company, with its plant and\nshipping facility at Norfolk, Va., including images of the plant and operations\nat Norfolk, materials concerning the acquisition of the Hitchcock Woods property\nat Aiken, S.C., title abstract to \"Breezy Hill,\" residence of E. F. Conger and\nfamily and company headquarters in Staunton, Va., and materials concerning sale\nand dissolution of the company.","Also, includes records of the Piedmont Company, formed by E.F. Conger through\nhis purchase of the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga. The company\nwas headquartered in Staunton but most of its operations were in Georgia and\nNorth Carolina, and its largest customer was Southeastern New England Telephone\nCompany. Materials include a minute book of meetings of the Board of Directors\n(largely a family owned and operated business), records of the purchase and\ndissolution of Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta, Ga., photographs of\nplants, operations and workers (some African American), a scrapbook documenting\npole production, treatment and shipping, records concerning the sale of the\ncompany assets to a newly re-constituted Piedmont Wood Preserving Company\nheadquartered in Spartanburg, S.C., and records relating to the later operations\nof the Piedmont Company as an investments holding firm.","Also, include personal and family papers of Edwin F. Conger relating to his\ndaughters, Dorothea (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker and Vivion Randolph (Conger)\nLeBow, his surviving grandchildren, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager, for\nwhom he served for a time as guardian; his interests in reforestation; and his\nphilanthropic support of local Staunton historic sites and social organizations.\nAmong these materials are also numerous photographs of family members,\nvacations, and other travel; materials concerning Conger's purchase and\noperation of a resort property at Horse Point Estates in Middlesex County, Va.;\nand a special file on the efforts of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure the release\nof Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her\nreside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients recovering from bouts\nof mental illness.","Lastly, the collection includes some financial records of Conger's wife,\nDorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger, as well as genealogical materials she collected\nprimarily on the Randolph and Tatum families; and some late financial records of\nthe Congers' daughter, Vivion (Conger) LeBow.","The first series in this collection provides background materials on the life and career of Edwin Fisher Conger (New Jersey native but long-time Staunton,\nVa., resident). His autobiography provides many helpful details on his education\nand entry into the pole-producing and treating business, introduces information\non several of the companies he acquired and operated, and presents useful\nmaterial on his lifelong interest in and support of American forestry and the\ninfluence of his forestry mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck (who is extensively\nfeatured later in the collection). "," Among the most important pieces in this series is the photograph album (folder\n4) compiled throughout Conger's business career (now disassembled for\npreservation purposes)-it contains important imagery of the pole-treatment\nbusiness and the operations of Conger's various companies (detailed below),\nincluding images of creosoting operations, timber lands, the Virginia Creosoting\nCompany plant in Culpeper, the Norfolk Creosoting Company plant, E.F. Conger\nCompany plant in Waynesboro, Piedmont Company plants and yards, general\noperations, and tributes to Dr. Carl A. Schenck, Conger's longtime friend and\nforestry mentor (see Series 5.2)","Edwin F. Conger's first truly successful venture into business began with the conversion of a lumber business in Lynchburg into the E. F. Conger Creosoting\nCompany (later simply known as the E. F. Conger Company). Like several of the\ncompanies he owned and operated, E. F. Conger Company over time become\nessentially a holding company for his investments, but for almost thirty years\nthis firm produced treated poles for telephone and utilities companies\nthroughout the eastern United States, his steadiest and most notable customer\nbeing Southeastern New England Telephone Company.","\nAlthough there are only limited records about the operations of the company\nhere, this series contains numerous images of the company's large treatment\nplant built and maintained at Waynesboro, Va.","Edwin F. Conger purchased and operated the Norfolk Creosoting Company for a relatively short time, but it proved to be one of his most successful ventures. Motivated by the success of E. F. Conger Company, Conger sought a facility with deep water access in order to move his operations more significantly into the coastwise trade in and supply of treated poles. The operations at Norfolk proved as important to shipping as they did to pole production and treatment.\n","The files here include a booklet produced by the Norfolk Creosoting Company long before Conger acquired it, along with another valuable photograph album documenting pole installation in the New York metropolitan area in the 1930s. Conger both collected writings about and wrote himself regarding pole treatment. Perhaps most interesting are the photographs showing the plant at Norfolk and its various operations. Because of the success of this venture, Conger was able to acquire a large number of acres of timber outside of Aiken, South Carolina (known by the name of one of its previous owners, the Hitchcock Woods). This provided him with an abundant supply of chestnut poles and also figured significantly in his future commitments to re-forestry and philanthropy. Through this company, Conger also purchased a stately residence in Staunton, Va. (\"Breezy Hill\"), which he used as a corporate headquarters (his wife served as treasurer of the company). Although the plant and some company assets were sold during World War II, the company itself did not actually dissolve until around 1950.\n","Perhaps the largest venture Conger operated during his lengthy career, Piedmont Creosoting Company (later simply the Piedmont Company) had its headquarters in Staunton, Virginia, but largest plant and operations in Augusta, Georgia. Conger acquired the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company of Augusta in the early 1930s, dissolved the existing company, and reconstituted operations as the Piedmont Creosoting Company. This company utilized pole collection yards in Connecticut to supply New England customers, and some images of those yards are included here.\n","The files in this series contain the most detailed information about any of the companies Conger operated, most importantly represented by the surviving minute book of Board of Directors' meetings for most the company's history. One of the most valuable pieces in terms of knowing the nature and extent, as well as the details, of Conger's various pole ventures comes in the form of a scrapbook (now disassembled for preservation purposes). Entitled \"From Forest to Field,\" it was prepared for Conger's eldest daughter, Dorothea, by A. B. Carlson, in June 1951. It carefully documents through text and images the operations of the Piedmont Company, using the work operations of the Company to supply an order of southern Yellow Pine poles for the Southern New England Telephone Company. The photographs were taken in the spring of 1949 and the text was drafted subsequently by Carlson of Southern New England Telephone. Poles were acquired from the \"Hitchcock Forest\" near Aiken, South Carolina, owned by E. F. Conger. The company plant in Augusta at that time shipped 100,000 poles per year. Images here show the plant and forest operations and some include depictions of African American workers. Also includes images of the treatment of poles with creosote (a mixture of oils) for preservation, as well as arrangements for shipping.\n","As noted above, this was one of Conger's firms that eventually became a holding company for investments, and some of the last files in this series document how Conger finally got out of the pole-producing and treatment business for good in the 1950s. The pole-treatment operations in Augusta and at other facilities throughout the eastern United States were eventually sold to a new company with an old name, Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, newly headquartered in Spartanburg, S.C. The file concerning the sale contains detailed materials on existing, often long-standing, company contracts that were transferred to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company, as well as materials on the sale of other assets and business contracts to Piedmont Wood Preserving Company.\n","The materials in this series primarily focus on Edwin F. Conger's personal life and family, documenting the life a successful businessman of the first half of the twentieth century might lead and the interests his fortune might encourage and support.\n","Edwin F. Conger personally retained a large amount of acreage in South Carolina that the success of the Norfolk Creosoting Company had enabled him to purchase. Some of the acreage was eventually sold to local interests for housing projects, some used to support the operations of the School of Forestry at the University of North Carolina (including the establishment of a professorship and scholarships), some set aside to honor Conger's lifelong friend and mentor, Dr. Carl A. Schenck, through the creation of a memorial forest and reforestation program (see also Series 5.2).\n        ","Edwin F. Conger studied under German forestry specialist Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck (1868-1955) before World War I and considered him a friend and mentor throughout his life. Conger's financial successes allowed him to join with other of his fellow alumni from the Biltmore Forestry School (where Schenck operated his original school on the grounds of the Biltmore estate in North Carolina) in the years immediately preceding his mentor's passing. The files here document some of those activities through a combination of text documents and photographs. One particularly interesting and unusual item is an album (with phonograph records) documenting Dr. Schenck's return visit to America: The Cavalcade of Trees for the Great: Being the Tour of Carl Alwin Schenck in America, 1951, under the Sponsorship of the American Forestry Association and graduates of the Biltmore Forest School.\n        ","The largest portion of this series of Edwin Conger's papers relates to his family and his personal affairs. These include financial records; files on local philanthropy in Staunton; activities involving his purchase and operation of a resort property in Middlesex County, Va., called Horse Point Estates; vacation trips and other travel; correspondence with, extensive photographs of, and files concerning trusts established for his two daughters and his grandchildren (most notably files on the divorce and remarriages of his eldest daughter, Dorothea Lloyd (Conger) Eager Grand Sverker, and the guardianship of her two surviving children, Howard Lloyd Eager and Edwin F. Eager).\n        ","One of the particularly interesting and unexpected files here concerns the Higgs/Redmond case: the attempt of Mrs. James A. Higgs to secure release of Lilly Redmond from Western State Hospital in Staunton in order to have her reside in an early prototype \"halfway house\" for patients with mental illness who had partially recovered (folder 95).\n        ","This series contains just a few files of the wife and second daughter of Edwin\nF. Conger. Dorothea Lloyd (Tatum) Conger (1893-1961) worked most of her years of\nmarriage as treasurer of companies her husband acquired and operated. Some of\nher letters to her two daughters are found in Conger's correspondence files. The\nfile of genealogical materials, primarily focused on her Tatum family ancestors\nand relations, is the largest grouping of materials of or about Mrs. Conger. A\nsmall amount of financial material relating to Vivion Randolph (Conger) LeBow\n(1923-2006), who left her father's papers to the Virginia Historical Society,\ncompletes the collection.\n"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions.\n"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The Edwin Fisher Conger papers focus primarily on several of Conger's business operations, specifically the production of treated telephone and\nelectrical poles. Two of Conger's chief operations, Norfolk Creosoting Company\nand the Piedmont Wood Preserving Company (later simply the Piedmont Company)\nfigure most heavily in the collection, along with information regarding Conger's\nfirst endeavor in this field, E.F. Conger Creosoting Company, his extensive\ntimber holdings near Aiken, South Carolina, and his financial, social, and\nphilanthropic dealings as a wealthy businessman living in Virginia.\n"],"names_ssim":["E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence.","Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974."],"corpname_ssim":["E.F. Conger Company - Records and correspondence."],"persname_ssim":["Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974."],"language_ssim":["English\n"],"total_component_count_is":173,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T18:52:57.653Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00020"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Virginia Historical Society","value":"Virginia Historical Society","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Virginia+Historical+Society"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979","value":"Edwin Fisher Conger Papers,\n1900-1979","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Edwin+Fisher+Conger+Papers%2C%0A1900-1979\u0026f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/collection_ssim.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}},{"type":"facet","id":"creator_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Creator","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Conger, Edwin Fisher\n","value":"Conger, Edwin Fisher\n","hits":1},"links":{"remove":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/creator_ssim.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}},{"type":"facet","id":"names_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Names","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974.","value":"Conger, Edwin Fisher, 1887-1974.","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcreators%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%0A\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Bnames%5D%5B%5D=Conger%2C+Edwin+Fisher%2C+1887-1974."}},{"attributes":{"label":"E.F. 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