The Life and Times of
The Blue Ox Millworks

The North Mountain Power Company building as it looked in 1946

Above: The North Mountain Power Company Building and future home of Blue Ox Millworks as it looked in 1946

Birth of an Ox

A long long time ago (roughly 1973) a Eureka native named Eric Hollenbeck set out to found a salvage logging company with 3 partners and a $300 bank loan.  With those $300 they purchased a used chainsaw, a set of chokers, half a tank of gas, and a little blue truck that they dubbed Ophelia Bumps. Eric (a forest veteran from the age of 15) had an immense amount of respect for the natural habitat, and this fledgling logging company soon got a reputation for having one of the cleanest environmental records in Northern California.  It was so clean in fact that they soon got the contract to do salvage logging for the state park service around Humboldt.

Eric and Blue Ox Logging partners load salvage logs onto Ophelia Bumps
The North Mountain Power Company building in 1973
A Salvaged Home

For three years, the boys rented the old North Mountain Power Company building for $50 a month in order to store their truck and cables.  Built in 1904, the building had been one of the first power plants in Humboldt County and had later taken turns as a trolley station, a shipwright's building, and even a dune buggy factory. By 1973 it was completely condemned.  To make matters worse, the property was flooded four months out of the year.  But the bank offered 100% financing (a deal no salvage logger could refuse). Blue Ox bought the property with payments of $600 a month and the stipulation that they make one noticeable improvement to the property per month.

Branching Out

When the housing crash hit in the early seventies, the bottom dropped out of the timber industry.  Overnight, many of the mills in Humboldt County closed their doors and refused to take in more logs.  Eric and his new wife Viviana decided to dedicate their energies toward manufacturing, and began turning out prefabricated sheds.  Between building sheds and turning their old salvage logs into fence posts, Blue Ox was one of the few timber related companies to survive the crash. By this point, Eric's other partners had gone their separate ways and Eric and Viviana moved forward bravely into the world of manufacturing.

Eric and Viviana made it through the housing slump by making pre-fabricated sheds
The Blue Ox Millworks 52-inch circular saw
Milling Around

As the other mills in Humboldt County began to close down, Eric went through their "bone piles" collecting antique equipment for the construction of his own Victorian era mill.  He wanted to preserve for future generations a piece of American history that was about to be lost, but more importantly he wanted to have a way to cut up his logs!  Blue Ox soon housed one of the last functioning 52 inch circular sawmills left in operation .  With the introduction of their 1905 Orton single sided planer, they were turning out quality finished lumber.

The Touch of a Craftsman

As more and more older tools entered into the Blue Ox family, it became very clear that there was something special being built in that old building beside Humboldt Bay.  Now our tool family has expanded to include almost all of the Victorian era trades, but we still specialize in the same things that got us here, quality woodworking and a respect  for our environment. Whether it's running gutter on our 1902 four-sided moulder, or cutting that perfect piece of gingerbread on an 1886 treadle-powered scroll saw, Blue Ox treats every piece of wood that comes through our shop with the love and respect to which it is entitled.  That love is apparent in all of our products.

Eric works on a hand carved detail
Eric, in his cleanest work shirt, shakes hands with President Clinton
A Wider Scope

As years passed Viviana insisted that Eric open his shop to a more national customer base.  Jobs started pouring in from Unalaska, Alaska to Jekyll Island Georgia, from Kamisu, Japan to Boston Massachusetts. Eric has made pieces for state parks, historic cathedrals, Russian East Orthodox churches, and two governor's mansions, and he has worked for the White House twice.  Tourists at the Blue Ox have included senators, representatives, cabinet members and foreign dignitaries, and Eric has met the president of the United States on two occasions, even being taken back to Washington DC to be honored in President Clinton's Earth Day speech.

Open for Tours

It has always been one of Eric's principle beliefs that craftsmanship techniques need to be shared.  That is one reason that although he has invented several processes he has never patented any of them.  To this purpose, the Blue Ox Millworks opened its doors for tours in the Summer of 1991. Our operation has grown quite a bit over the years, and the tour now encompasses many trades of the Victorian era, including Blacksmithing, Ceramics, Plaster, Printing, and of course all of the wood working trades that have made the Blue Ox famous.  In recent years workshops have been added for group tours at an additional charge, so that large groups can blacksmith a nail or make their own ceramic tiles.

Blue Ox students practice their canning skills while receiving history lessons in the cookshack
Two of the Blue Ox's young printers in action
Sharing Knowledge

In 1989, the Blue Ox Millworks began hosting area students for the first time.  Through a partnership with the Humboldt Office of Education, this program was expanded in 1999 to include a full time high school.  Students of the Blue Ox spend three days of their week in a regular classroom setting, and spend the remainder of their days at the Ox participating in project based learning.  After 4-6 years they graduate with a regular high school diploma and a valuable trade.  Some of our students go on to become carpenters, cabinetmakers, blacksmiths or mill workers, keeping valuable skills alive and becoming an integral part of our community.

A Haven for the Arts

In 1995 the Blue Ox Millworks expanded its historic park division with the first of its now biannual events celebrating craftsmanship around the world.  Craftsman's Days (held on the first weekend after Thanksgiving) and May Day (held on the first Saturday in May) now bring in several thousand visitors to the Blue Ox each year.  These events bring together traditional craftsmen from around Northern California to showcase their wares and explain their trades to the public. These craftsmen often include blacksmiths, weavers, bookbinders, jewelry makers, glass blowers and a variety of other trades.

Many local craftsmen have been kind enough to demonstrate their art for the public at Blue Ox's annual Craftsman's Days and May Day events
The legendary Paul Bunyan poses next to the Blue Ox main office
Blue Ox Millworks - Where Even the Run of the Mill is Extraordinary