I'm curious about a couple trees that I haven't ever heard come up in the literature or online. One is Gray Birch (Betula populifolia), and the other is Pin Cherry (Prunus pensylvanica, aka Fire Cherry).
Gray Birch, as I recall was pretty dense stuff. Additionally, it was the only wood that you could cut green in the winter, and throw straight in the stove in a pinch. That property pretty much saved my parent's butts back in the 50's, when they bought their farm in the fall, and the sellers took all the firewood with them when they moved out. It seems to me that indicates a pretty low natural moisture content to begin with.
Pin Cherry has probably the most beautiful bark of any tree native to the northeast, and I would love to try it as a bark on project. It looks similar to some asian ornamental cherrys, with bright red birch-like bark. I used to make green stick bows with it when I was 8-9 years old. The online information I found stated that it was weak wood, with no economic value.
Both trees are pioneer schrub species, rarely exceeding 6" diameter and viable log size trees just don't happen, so there isn't much info out there on mechanical properties.
Uh oh, just thought of another, how about Striped Maple (Acer pensylvanicum)?