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Edgar S. Booker was an entrepreneur and prominent member of the
Bellingham business
community who was actively involved in the structural development of the
area. His initial work in the 1890’s
with C.H. Stock and Company as a building contractor led to the establishment of
his own contracting company with Donald B. Campbell. The names Booker & Campbell were well
known at the time for their association with all manner of local construction
projects. It was Booker and Campbell who
were awarded the 1907 contract to build the Bellingham Bay Library, which was
partially funded by a donation from Andrew Carnegie. Beyond the Bellingham
Bay region Booker was also active
in building contracting in Vancouver,
British
Columbia through another of his companies, Booker,
Campbell & Whipple, Ltd.. This
company was responsible for the construction of the Vancouver City Y.M.C.A. in
1913 as well as many other buildings in the area.
Edgar Booker was also a man of diverse financial interests
who tended to be involved in numerous plans to generate fiscal prosperity. Around the turn of the century Booker became
one of the primary partners in the Granite Creek Gold Mining Company which
consolidated a large number of individual placer claims in the Ruby Creek gold
mining district of the Mt. Baker gold fields.
This company operated for many years and served to stimulate
shareholders with dreams of quick riches and the potential for long-term
financial returns. This endeavor led to
Booker’s investment in 327,000 acres of timber lands in central Mexico
through the Tehuantepec
Land
and Timber Co., Inc., of which he was a founding partner. Booker believed that this investment would
also potentially expand into a mining operation and ultimately generate
a highly successful return. Throughout
this period, though, Edgar Booker steadfastly remained a prominent building
contractor in the Puget Sound region and was responsible
for much of the physical development of the locality. He died in 1924.
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