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List of company towns in the United States - Wikipedia
CaliforniaEdit
CaliforniaEdit
- Betteravia, California, built by Union Sugar Company
- Chester, California, associated with The Collins Companies
- Cowell, California, built by Cowell Portland Cement
- Crannell, California, built by Little River Redwood Company[2]
- Fort Bragg, California, is a decommissioned United States Army post with residential development and California Western Railroad service overseen by the Union Lumber Company[3]
- Graeagle, California, owned by Fruit Growers Supply Company, an affiliate of Sunkist
- Hercules, California, built by the Hercules Powder Company
- Hilt, California, owned by Northern California Lumber Co., then purchased by the Fruit Growers Supply Company, an affiliate of Sunkist
- Irvine, California, built by The Irvine Company and incorporated in 1971; the largest planned community in the world, but technically not a company town.
- Kirkwood, California, Owned by Vail Resorts
- Korbel, Humboldt County, California, built by Humboldt Lumber Mill Company[4]
- McCloud, California, built by McCloud River Railroad Lumber Company.
- Metropolitan, California, built by Metropolitan Redwood Lumber Company[5]
- Nipton, California, owned by American Green llc
- Nortonville, California, owned by the Black Diamond Coal Mining Company
- Pino Grande, California, built by El Dorado Lumber Company[6]
- Rockport, California, built by Cottoneva Lumber Company[3]
- Samoa, California, built by Vance Lumber Company[7]
- Scotia, California, largely owned by the Pacific Lumber Company (PALCO)
- Selby, California, owned by American Smelting and Refining Company.
- Spreckels, California, formerly owned by Spreckels Sugar Company
- Tormey, California, owned by American Smelting and Refining Company.
- Trona, California, formerly owned by American Potash and Chemical
- Usal, California, built by Usal Redwood Company[8]
- Weed, California, named for sawmill owner Abner Weed
- Westwood, California, built by the Red River Lumber Company, sold in 1944 to Fruit Growers Supply Company, an affiliate of Sunkist
- Wheeler, California, built by lumber company