| dubois profile
The DuBois Family
compiled by
Columbian staff
The pioneering DuBois
family is remembered mostly for its lumber mill business, but members
also branched into journalism, banking and other activities.
William B. DuBois and
his brother, Lewis, started the original mill on Salmon Creek about
1885 after arriving from Iowa. Shortly afterward, the brothers moved
the business to Vancouver.
By 1903-04 the company
was known as DuBois and Son, named for William DuBois and his oldest
son, George Lockwood DuBois, who was about 35 at the time. After
his father's death in 1905, George took over as president.
George DuBois also was
active in several other lumbering and mill enterprises before his
death in 1949.
Joseph J. Donovan was
secretary-treasurer of the mill at Vancouver, and was associated
in other DuBois ventures.
Robert Lewis DuBois,
better known as Lloyd DuBois (he was another son of William DuBois)
learned the printing business at the Vancouver weekly Independent
and eventually bought the newspaper. He also served as postmaster
during the administration of President William McKinley and was
president of the Washington Exchange Bank.
His son, Lloyd DuBois
Jr., was a graduate of Harvard University school of business and
vice president of Washington National Bank. He died unexpectedly
in 1950 at the age of 46.
Another son, Will DuBois,
worked on the Independent, was a partner in the family mill, helped
organize the Columbia River Paper Mill (now the Boise Cascade Corp.
plant at Vancouver), and was a partner with his son, Richard, in
a car dealership here.
The family has numerous
descendants, some still carrying on the family name DuBois in Clark
County.
Return to Clark County Ancestors
|