W.H.C. Folsom Politician

William Henry Carman Folsom (1817–1900) is best known as a lumber baron of the St. Croix River Valley. He left his home and family in Maine at age 15, working his way westward as a farm laborer, logger and lumber camp cook, and dam builder.Folsom became involved in the lumber business in what would become the Minnesota Territory and began investing in land in Minnesota and Wisconsin. He settled permanently at Taylors Falls, Minnesota, where he later invested in other enterprises such as a hotel, a lumber mill and the first bridge tospan the St. Croix River. He served as a state representative and served six terms as a state senator. Folsom was an active historian and writer, publishing several articles and a book, Fifty Years in the Northwest, which was published by the St. Paul Pioneer Press Company in 1888.He died in 1900 at his home, Folsom House, which is maintained as a historic site by a local chapter of the Minnesota Historical Society.

Personal facts

W.H.C. Folsom
Birth dateJune 22, 1817
Birth place
New Brunswick
Date of deathJanuary 01, 1900
Place of death
Taylors Falls Minnesota

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