Sentences with phrase «lumber baron»

The phrase "lumber baron" refers to a person who made a lot of money and gained a lot of power by owning and controlling a large amount of forests and timber, and the industry associated with it. They were often wealthy businessmen in the past who were involved in the lumber trade. Full definition
The story is set in the late 1920s, as lumber baron George (Bradley Cooper) struggles under the economic pressures of the impending Great Depression.
The earliest settlers came to Longview during the early 1850s, and it was primarily farmland until 1918, when lumber baron Robert A. Long moved operations here.
The earliest settlers came to Longview during the early 1850s, and it was primarily farmland until 1918, when lumber baron Robert A. Long moved operations here.
Cooper plays Serena's husband, George Pemberton, a wealthy lumber baron.
Wall Street, the white South, Western lumber barons, even his own Republican leadership in Congress strive to harness his steadily increasing power.
Built by one of the great lumber barons of the 19th century, the William Carson Mansion is a sight to behold in Old Town Eureka.
The innkeepers serve a hot Scottish breakfast to their guests daily to honor the mansion's original owner, John Mouat, an authentic Scottish lumber baron.
Oh Wow, once we had a Butler's pantry in a 1905 lumber baron house that had been made into the downstairs bathroom.
This is a tiny hamlet of nineteenth - century settlement, much reduced from its ancient prosperity, yet the house is there, newly built from the ashes of its fiery ruin, Piety Hill, an Italianate pile, which began as a lumber baron's residence, sank to a refuge for impoverished gentry, and became the seat of a literary man — a history suggestive of larger changes in American society since 1918.
With their wealth, the lumber barons built elaborate Greek Revival and Victorian mansions and the 31 - foot high statue of Paul Bunyan.
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