Frances Biron Sr. purchased the sawmill and the land it stood on in 1846 and rebuilt the mill in 1853.
The White House was a very rich piece of history that stood on the land of the Biron paper mill.
Built in 1865 the 3,300 square foot, 2-story home featured semi-French windows, hardwood floors, paneled ceilings, and outside scalloped edging, gables and a front and side porch.
[2] The Biron family lived here for many years and the house later became an office space for Consolidated Papers.
Biron's B25 machine produces about 270,000 short tons of corrugating medium and linerboard yearly.
[5] The conversion from white paper to brown paper included the construction of two different Old Corrugated Container(OCC) plants which takes landfill bound waste cardboard and produces renewable fiber-based pulp.