0 an outside area where wood for building is stored and sold --
1 a place where wood used in building is stored and sold --
By 1882 there were 280 students and businesses included a motel, a mill, a hardware store, a lumberyard, and a few other shops.
Together, they built grain flat houses and opened a lumberyard.
By 1911, the town supported several businesses, a hotel, and a lumberyard.
He operated his lumberyard and furniture-making business right next door to his house.
The town boasted a number of retail businesses, including hotels, banks, a lumberyard, a railroad cafe, and an automobile dealership.
Four years later, the 25-person settlement boasted a lumberyard, general store, and telephone service.
His father sent him to manage a tobacco factory at age 14, and at 19 he was put in charge of his uncle's lumberyards.
He worked as a houseboy on the estate and, as a young man, worked in the lumberyard.