SCOTIA — The final time Mary Bullwinkel and her beloved little city had been within the nationwide media highlight was not a cheerful interval. Bullwinkel was the spokesperson for the logging big Pacific Lumber within the late Nineties, when reporters flooded into this typically forgotten nook of Humboldt County to cowl the timber wars and go to a younger lady who had staged a dramatic environmental protest in an previous progress redwood tree.
Julia “Butterfly” Hill — whose ethereal, barefoot portraits excessive within the redwood cover grew to become a logo of the Redwood Summer time — spent two years residing in a thousand-year-old tree, named Luna, to maintain it from being felled. Down on the bottom, it was Bullwinkel’s obligation to talk not for the timber however for the timber employees, lots of them residing within the Pacific Lumber city of Scotia, whose livelihoods had been at stake. It was a task that introduced her loss of life threats and detrimental publicity.
Julia “Butterfly” Hill stands in a centuries-old redwood tree nicknamed “Luna” in April 1998. Hill would spend somewhat greater than two years within the tree, protesting logging within the old-growth forest.
(Andrew Lichtenstein / Sygma through Getty Pictures)
The timber wars have receded into the mists of historical past. Outdated-growth forests had been protected. Pacific Lumber went bankrupt. 1000’s of timber jobs had been misplaced. However Bullwinkel, now 68, continues to be in Scotia. And this time, she has a a lot much less fraught mission — though one that’s no easier: She and one other longtime PALCO worker are preventing to save lots of Scotia itself, by promoting it off, home by home.
After the 2008 chapter of Pacific Lumber, a New York hedge fund took possession of the city, an asset it didn’t relish in its portfolio. Bullwinkel and her boss, Steve Deike, got here on board to draw would-be homebuyers and remake what many say is the final firm city in America right into a vibrant new group.
“It’s very gratifying for me to be right here immediately,” Bullwinkel stated not too long ago, as she strolled the city’s streets, which look as if they may have been teleported in from the Twenties. “To maintain Scotia alive, mainly.”
Mary Bullwinkel, residential actual property gross sales coordinator for City of Scotia Firm, LLC, stands in entrance of the corporate’s places of work. The LLC owns lots of the homes and a number of the industrial buildings in Scotia.
Some new residents say they’re thrilled.
“It’s stunning. I name it my little Mayberry. It’s like going again in time,” stated Morgan Dodson, 40, who purchased the fourth home bought on the town in 2018 and lives there together with her husband and two youngsters, ages 9 and 6.
However the transformation has proved extra sophisticated — and brought longer — than anybody ever imagined it might. Almost twenty years after PALCO filed for bankrupcty, simply 170 of the 270 homes have been bought, with seven extra in the marketplace.
“Nobody has ever subdivided an organization city earlier than,” Bullwinkel stated, noting that many different firm cities that dotted the nation within the nineteenth century “simply disappeared, so far as I do know.”
The primary massive hurdle was determining the way to legally put together the properties on the market: As an organization city, Scotia was not made up of tons of of particular person parcels, with particular person gasoline meters and water mains. It was one massive property. Extra not too long ago, the flagging actual property market has made folks skittish.
Many on the town say the battle to remodel Scotia mirrors a bigger battle in Humboldt County, which has been rocked, first by the faltering of its logging business and extra not too long ago by the collapse of its hashish financial system.
“Scotia is a microcosm of so many issues,” stated Gage Duran, a Colorado-based architect who purchased the century-old hospital and is working to redevelop it into flats. “It’s a microcosm for what’s taking place in Humboldt County. It’s a microcosm for the challenges that California is dealing with.”
The Humboldt Sawmill Firm Energy Plant nonetheless operates in of Scotia.
The Pacific Lumber Firm was based in 1863 because the Civil Struggle raged. The corporate, which ultimately grew to become the most important employer in Humboldt County, planted itself alongside the Eel River south of Eureka and set about harvesting the traditional redwood and Douglas fir forests that prolonged for miles by the ocean mists. By the late 1800s, the corporate had begun to construct properties for its employees close to its sawmill. Initially referred to as “Forestville,” firm officers modified the city’s title to Scotia within the Eighteen Eighties.
For greater than 100 years, life in Scotia was ruled by the corporate that constructed it. Employees lived within the city’s redwood cottages and paid hire to their employer. They saved their yards in good form, or confronted the wrath of their employer. Water and energy got here from their employer.
However the firm took care of its employees and created a group that was the envy of many. The neat redwood cottages had been properly maintained. The hospital on the town supplied private care. Neighbors walked to the market or the group heart or right down to the baseball diamond. When the city’s youngsters grew up, firm officers supplied them with faculty scholarships.
“I desperately needed to dwell in Scotia,” recalled Jeannie Fulton, who’s now the pinnacle of the Humboldt County Farm Bureau. When she and her husband had been youthful, she stated, her husband labored for Pacific Lumber however the couple didn’t dwell within the firm city.
Fulton recalled that the corporate had “the perfect Christmas get together ever” every year, and officers handed out a good looking reward to each single little one. “Not low-cost little presents. These had been Santa Claus worthy,” Fulton stated.
However issues started to alter within the Nineteen Eighties, when Pacific Lumber was acquired in a hostile takeover by Texas-based Maxxam Inc. The acquisition led to the departure of the longtime homeowners, who had been dedicated to sustainably harvesting timber. It additionally left the corporate loaded with debt.
To repay the money owed, the brand new firm started reducing timber at a livid tempo, which infuriated environmental activists.
A view of the city of Scotia and timber operations, someday within the late 1800s or early 1900s.
(The Pacific Lumber Firm assortment)
1. Redwood logs are processed by the Pacific Lumber Firm in 1995 in Scotia, CA. This was the most important redwood lumber mill on this planet, leading to clashes with the environmental group for years. (Gilles Mingasson / Getty Pictures) 2. Redwood logs are trucked to the Pacific Lumber Firm in 1995 in Scotia, CA. (Gilles Mingasson / Getty Pictures)
Amongst them was Hill, who was 23 years previous on a fall day in 1997 when she and different activists hiked onto Pacific Lumber land. “I didn’t know a lot concerning the forest activist motion or what we had been about to do,” Hill later wrote in her guide. “I simply knew that we had been going to take a seat on this tree and that it had one thing to do with defending the forest.”
As soon as she was cradled in Luna’s limbs, Hill didn’t come down for greater than two years. She grew to become a trigger celebre. Film stars corresponding to Woody Harrelson and musicians together with Willie Nelson and Joan Baez came around her. With Hill nonetheless within the tree, Pacific Lumber agreed to promote 7,400 acres, together with the traditional Headwaters Grove, to the federal government to be preserved.
A truck driver carries a load of lumber down Fundamental Road in Scotia. The historic firm city is working to draw new residents and companies, however progress has been gradual.
Then simply earlier than Christmas in 1999, Hill and her compatriots reached a closing cope with Pacific Lumber. Luna can be protected. The tree nonetheless stands immediately.
Pacific Lumber limped alongside for seven extra years earlier than submitting for chapter, which was finalized in 2008.
Marathon Asset Administration, a New York hedge fund, discovered itself in possession of the city.
Deike, who was born within the Scotia hospital and lived on the town for years, and Bullwinkel, got here on board as staff of an organization referred to as The City of Scotia to start promoting it off.
Deike stated he thought it is perhaps a three-year job. That was almost 20 years in the past.
He began within the mailroom at Pacific Lumber as a younger man and rose to turn into certainly one of its most distinguished native executives. Now he seems like an city planner when he describes the method of remodeling an organization city.
His speech is peppered with references to “infrastructure enhancements” and “subdivision maps” and in addition to the peculiar challenges created by Pacific Lumber’s constructing.
“They did no matter they needed,” he stated. “Construct this home over the sewer line. There was a manhole cowl in a storage. Plus, it wasn’t mapped.”
Steven Deike, president of City of Scotia Firm LLC, and Mary Bullwinkel, the corporate’s residential actual property gross sales coordinator, look at a room being transformed into flats on the Scotia Hospital.
The primary homes went up on the market in 2017 and extra have adopted yearly since.
Dodson and her household got here in 2018. Like a number of the new homeowners, Dodson had some historical past with Scotia. Though she lived in Sacramento rising up, a few of her household labored for Pacific Lumber and lived in Scotia and he or she had completely happy reminiscences of visiting the city.
“The primary home I noticed was excellent,” she stated. “Hardwood flooring, and made out of redwood so that you don’t have to fret about termites.”
She has cherished each minute since. “We stroll to high school. We stroll to pay our water invoice. We stroll to choose up our mail. There’s a number of youngsters within the neighborhood.”
The transformation, nevertheless, has proceeded slowly.
And recently, financial forces have begun to buffet the hassle as properly, together with the slowing actual property market.
Dodson, who additionally works as an actual property agent, stated she thinks some folks could also be postpone by the city’s cheek-by-jowl homes. Additionally, she added, “we don’t have garages and the water invoice is astronomical.”
However she added, “as soon as folks get inside them, they see the craftsmanship.”
Duran, the Colorado architect making an attempt to repair up the previous hospital, is amongst those that have run into surprising hurdles on the street to redevelopment.
A venture that was presupposed to take a yr is now in its third, delayed by all the pieces from a scarcity {of electrical} tools to a dearth of employees.
“I might guess {that a} portion of the expert workforce has left Humboldt County,” Duran stated, including that the collapse of the weed market signifies that “some folks have relocated as a result of they had been doing building but additionally hashish.”
He added that he and his household and associates have been “doing a tough factor to attempt to repair up this constructing and provides it new life, and my hope is that different folks will make their very own investments into the group.”
A yr in the past, an unlikely customer returned: Hill herself. She got here again to talk at a fundraiser for Sanctuary Forest, a nonprofit land conservation group that’s now the steward of Luna. The occasion was held on the 100-year-old Scotia Lodge — which as soon as housed visiting timber executives however now affords boutique resort rooms and craft cocktails.
Most of the new residents had by no means heard of Hill or recognized of her connection to the realm. Tamara Nichols, 67, who found Scotia in late 2023 after shifting from Paso Robles, stated she knew little of the city’s historical past.
However she loves being so near the old-growth redwoods and the Eel River, which she swims in. She additionally loves how intentional so many on the town are about constructing group.
What’s extra, she added: “All these timber, there’s only a really feel to them.”


