|
Latest News Archived News |
|
Mission FAQ Current Projects Projects Map Financial Info Our People Related Links |
|
Membership Project Gifts Tribute Gifts Gifts of Land Bequests Advocacy Volunteers Donate Now |
|
About Membership Member Benefits Join Today |
|
Office Information Staff Contacts |
|
Articles Iowa conservationists Other online publications Eagle Nest Diaries Get outdoors |
|
Upcoming Events Featured Destinations Outdoor Guide Iowa Trails Visit INHF Projects |
|
Permanent Land Protection Land Management |
|
INHF Magazines Annual Report INHF Books INHF wall calendar |
|
About Internships Intern Testimonials How to Apply |
Iowa's CCC: a lasting legacyThis article first appeared in INHF's Fall 2006 magazine.
by Bill Horine
In March of 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt authorized the formation of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) to meet two pressing needs:
President Roosevelt hoped that the program would boost the economywhile keeping the men out of trouble and building their morale. However, he couldn't have known just how far the CCC’s effects would extend into the future. You can still spot the CCC’s lasting effects on Iowa’s landscape and its participantsincluding me. CCC overview The CCC was supervised by the U.S. Armyand the military influence was apparent in the camps’ set-up, management and discipline. Other government agenciessuch as the National Park Service, the Forest Service and the Soil Conservation Servicehelped arrange individual work projects. Typical CCC projects involved planting trees (3 billion trees nationwide!), building soil erosion dams, constructing park trails and structures, and otherwise preserving natural resources that were taking a beating from the nationwide drought and depression. The programwhich lasted from 1933 to 1942also provided good nutrition, work, wages and job skills for more than 3 million Americans, including about 46,000 men working in Iowa. The CCC and me I graduated from Wilson High in Cherokee in 1933about the trough of the Depressionand finding steady work was nearly impossible. It was day labor for 50 cents a day if you could find it. I gratefully joined the CCC in July 1934 and was assigned to Company 774 in Centerville. In that first year of Iowa’s CCC, 12,800 men worked in 34 Iowa camps. Requirements for joining the CCC were simple: Enrollees had to be young, single, healthy and unemployed. The original sign-up period was for six months, with possible extensions. I received the standard monthly CCC wage of $30. The government automatically sent $25 of that home to our parentsand that money was a great help to my folks and many like them. With the government covering our living expenses, that $5 covered almost anything else we might needlike cigarettes (10 cents per pack), stamps (3 cents for a first class stamp), magazines, stationery, candy (5 cents per bar) and movie tickets (15 cents).
Camp life A typical CCC camp was organized in military fashionwith barracks, mess hall, camp store, infirmary, camp office, tool shed and, of course, latrines. Upon arriving in camp, we were subjected to a strict military regimenan adaptation that came in handy to those of us who later entered the various military services. The military schedule meant rising before dawn, securing and policing the barracks, having breakfast and then going to work on assigned tasks. If we were in the field, lunch would be brought and coffee made over an open fire. Then back to camp, get cleaned up and in clean clothes in time for the 5:15 dinner bell. Everyone also had to take a turn at kitchen dutyalso known as KP (Kitchen Police). Of course, camp life was not all work. Evening brought time for mail call or to write a letter home. We had baseball, basketball, football, boxing and track teamsand the rivalry between camps could be intense. We were also allowed to get passes and go home occasionally on weekends. Since most of us had no money for bus fare, we could either hitchhike or bum rides on local trains. Investigating the train possibilities, I found out that by changing several lines we could travel all night and arrive in Cherokee the following morning, disheveled, dirty, full of cinders and smoke, but home. We would hitchhike back to Centerville on Sunday afternoon. Other times we could get weekend passes and visit friends in neighboring CCC camps. My friend, Cliff Peck, was stationed in camp 773 at nearby Drakesville. One weekend we hitchhiked into Oskaloosa to go to the movie, thinking we could get back to camp later. We couldn't catch a ride that evening to save our souls. We prevailed on the town marshall to let us stay in the local jail overnight as we had no money for a hotel room. He let us stay overnight, released us in the morning and even gave each of us a quarter to get our breakfast.In addition to our job training, the CCC offered us evening classes. Some CCC workers received their high school diplomas this way. Others took correspondence or college courses. For example, I remember studying typing and journalism. The results My first work in Company 774 was on soil erosion projects. The Iowa CCC built thousands of erosion-control structures, particularly in the southern counties. Such projects took on particular urgency during these “dust bowl” years. Later, I was fortunate to join a crew constructing trails in a proposed park east of Centervillenow Sharon Bluffs State Park. We also built a stone shelter house, one of more than 700 structures built by CCC workers in Iowa’s state parks. Other Iowa crews planted millions of trees on newly acquired state forest lands. All this workfrom trails to picnic tables to stone lodgeswas done by hand and from native materials. Many of these structures are still in use todayand some have been placed on historic registries to recognize their distinct architectural style. However, the CCC legacy can also be found in its workersincluding me. While I’d always been an outdoor kid, the CCC helped me learn more about naturelike about trees and erosion control. That, and the journalism and typing courses I took at camp, contributed greatly to my future career and personal interests. Though I’m now age 91 and many decades removed from my CCC service, I still feel proudand luckyto have been a part of it. See additional photos of CCC projects Get additional web resources on the CCC
For more information, e-mail Cathy Engstrom, Director of Communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
© Copyright
2008
Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation |