The Sierra Nevada Logging Museum is located in the community of
White Pines on a site, originally occupied by the historic logging and mill workers' camp of the Blagen Lumber Company, which operated from 1938 to 1962. The museum is in a building, on a forested slope above White Pines Lake (elevation 4,000 feet). It has an indoor exhibit space, as well as outdoor exhibits of large logging equipment and artifacts.
Exhibits Indoor museum Museum exhibits highlight economic, technological, social, and cultural contributions made throughout the region by loggers and the logging industry. Interior displays include working models of
sawmills and logging camps, historic logging photos,
dioramas illustrating the evolution of logging from the 1850s to the present day, and a large collection of logging tools such as
handsaws, drag saws and
chainsaws,
peaveys and
canthooks,
broadaxes and felling
axes. Also, a full-size scene of a 1930s-era logging camp family
cabin, and touch-screen displays of logging sights and sounds are highlights of the museum.
Open-air museum Interpretive
trails guide visitors to historic artifacts: a Willamette
Steam donkey that first operated in Tuolumne County, a "two-man" sawmill, a 1920 Shay logging
locomotive (under restoration), several enormous logging arches, three caterpillar
tractors from the 1930s, a drying-yard lumber carrier, a historic Adams horse-drawn
grader used for road clearing in the woods, and many others. ==Surrounding amenities==