
The other day, I got an interoffice envelope with lots of fun things, but one stood out from the rest. Crane is a family business, owned and managed by members of the Crane family. But there are also other families whose members have worked at Crane for generations. We know the Murrays have worked there for five generations. And we know that the Drosehns have had more than 120 members of its extended family employed by Crane.
So, when I came across a piece of paper - the results of a papermaking trial in 1945 with the name Wellspeak - I knew exactly who that would have been. Charlie Wellspeak - that's him standing next to Mary Ward - is a retired papermaker and a curator at the Crane Museum of Papermaking.

Back to the piece of paper Charlie senior made. It's a beautiful snowy white. It has a very soft feel in the hand, yet is crisp and rattly. There is no notation of the basis weight, but it's probably right around 16 pounds.
It was no surprise that this thin paper was being made for Air Mail, as its watermark confirms.


"Oh sure," said Charlie. "We made paper from hemp all the time, especially carbon paper." Hemp has notoriously long and strong fibers, so it imparts excellent strength properties to thin papers like Air Mail or carbon.
I won't get into the politics of hemp as a viable raw material for paper made in the United States. I'll leave that to you.
I can tell you that this is one beautiful, strong piece of paper that Charlie's Dad made.
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