white pine † DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
THIS ENTRY MAY CONTAIN OUTDATED INFORMATION, TERMS and EXAMPLES
1a
a tall, stately pine, Pinus strobus, of eastern Canada, much used for shipmasts in colonial days and providing the basis for the lumber industry.
See also: buckwheat pine pumpkin pine Quebec pine Weymouth pine
- 1767  They are hereby forbid to cut down . . . White Pine . . . on the lands above described.
- 1853  Generally speaking, the white or American pine, from its vast length of trunk, contains a larger number of cubic feet than any other tree in the Canadian forest.
- 1966  But the white pine, tallest and stateliest of all the trees in Ontario, was held the most worthy of worship
1b
the light, soft wood of this tree.
- 1828  Wanted, 500 Cords Hemlock Tamarac, or Dry white Pine Wood.
- 1947  He would have to make his own [shingles] with a drawknife and some chunks of "corky" white pine. . . .
2
a slim, straight pine, Pinus contorta var. latifolia, common in the Rocky Mountain region, so called because the young trees make good lodgepoles.
See also: lodgepole pine
- 1894  Ascending the slope on the west side of the valley we come at once into a belt of the western hemlock and white pine which is characteristic of all the mountains from here to the Coast Range.
- 1956  Lodgepole Pine [is also called] white pine. . . .
3 — Lumbering
the western white pine, especially with reference to its wood.
See also: western white pine
- 1956  Western white pine [is also called] white pine. . . .
- 1966  SPECIES CUT, ALL PRODUCTS, 1964, CONVERTED TO F.B.M. . . . Totals, Coast . . . White Pine 3, 717, 638.