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Tioga Sawmill Commissary

The Iron Mountain Railroad pushed its lines into Central Louisiana in 1880. Five miles north of Pineville, Julius Levin built a sawmil1 beside the tracks. He named his town "Levin” which was later changed to "Tioga. A commissary was built at this time. In 1905, built by Levin, was purchased by Stephen Sword” Lee and the name changed to the Lee Lumber Company.

The commissary was a rural version of the uptown department store. The Tioga commissary offered everything needed in a normal household, including sewing fabric, work clothes, over-the-counter drugs, cosmetics, canned goods, fresh produce, meats, horse feed, hay and fencing. Ice cost 5 cents for a ten pound block.

The sawmill closed in 1925 when timber had been depleted; the houses and commissary purchased by Sam Allen. Mr. Sam continued to serve the community until 1947 when Rudolph Merritt, a long time employee of the store, acquired the inventory. In 1981, this historic structure closed its doors as the community store.

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