The tall concrete smokestack, which stands at the east side of Monroe near the intersection of Main Street and State Route 2 across from Tavelers Park, is all that remains of a large condensery that once stood on the site of the Monroe shopping Center. In 1908, [the Monroe Commercial Club] saw their chance to attract a milk condensing plant of the Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Company (also known as Carnation). The membership was determined that the importance of securing this industry cannot be overestimated and the chances are good. It now remains to go after it hard. Within a few months the club contacted local farmers and conducted a "cow canvas" and raised a cash fund of $6000 to purchase a factory site which was then donated to the company. The condensery was built in 1908 out of locally milled lumber. Farmers brought in better cattle to improve their herds, and within a month of completion of the factory over $140,000 worth of farming acreage had been sold. Soon the factory was handling the milk of over 5000 cows and shipping 26 carloads of product monthly.*
Increased competition forced the closure of the condensery and it was sold in 1928 when Carnation moved operations to Mount Vernon. The plant remained idle throughout the Depression. When the United States entered World War II, flax was declared a strategic material. In early 1942, the Pacific Fiber Flax Association bought the plant in early early 1942 and began to remodel it into a flax processing plant at a cost of $65,000. Local farmers were persuaded to grow flax and by the end of 1943, the plant employed 40 workers turning the flax into linen.
It was decided it would be too difficult and dangerous to remove the smokestack, which remains today as a Monroe landmark. The chimney cleanout at the base on the south side has been closed up as well as the rectangular flue opening on the west side. On the east side, about halfway up, is the remains of an old ENCO sign for the service station that was once located at its base. --from information compiled by Bill Wojciechowski *from the 13th annual Getting Acquainted With Our Valleys supplement, Historical Edition, to the Monroe Monitor and Sultan Valley News, June 2, 1982, pages 20-21, by Nancy Moore Rockafellar. Return to Main Menu |