The year was 1955. Elvis was taking Memphis by storm. In the
lumber industry, a young man named Don Overmyer was making his mark in a small
Alabama mill. Trained on the green chain from the tender age of 12 at his
father's company - Chattanooga Box & Lumber Co. - the young man had a keen eye
for thickness, width, grade and species. He also had a strong work ethic
and was eager to learn everything about the business. Little did he know
that his talent and ambition would take him to the top of his own company in
just 11 short years.
Upon his father's retirement in 1966, Overmyer saw that the
company's primary product line - Coca Cola cases made of soft hardwood lumber
from Mississippi River sawmills - would soon be obsolete. The demise of
returnable bottles meant the end of wooden beverage cases, so Overmyer sold his
shares in the box plant and bought the Linden sawmill.
Today, under Overmyer's leadership, the small log
yard known as Linden Lumber has grown into one of the most impressive hardwood
lumber manufacturing operations with satellite log yards in Camden, AL and Hickory, MS. The original yard
located midway between Mobile and Birmingham, in some of the finest hardwood
forest land in North America, has expanded from its original 14 acres to a
massive yard covering more than 150 acres. And the company has expanded
into a new division - hardwood flooring. In 1988, the first flooring line
was built. Due to the success of the hardwood flooring division, the
Linden plant now runs 5 flooring production lines.
But the saga of Linden Lumber doesn't end here.
While Don Overmyer is still actively involved in the strategic management of the
company, his son, Hugh, now heads up operations as Vice President and General
Manager. With a third generation helping lead the company into a new era,
the rest of this story has yet to unfold.