Friday, August 31, 2018

We Can Take It





Lodge - Starved Rock State Park, Illinois

The CCC built  rustic shelters in the woods in various locations in  rural America.
The CCC was perhaps the most popular of the New Deal programs brought out to stem the suffering of the Depression.   The legacy of the New Deal construction may be seen in Kentucky and in the Southeast.

The Levi Jackson State Park near Corbin, Kentucky rests on the alignment of the Wilderness Road. The Wilderness Road was key to the early settlement of the Kentucky area.  The CCC provided much of the roads and the parking areas at the park. 
The Pine Mountain State Park, was established in 1924, in Bell County Kentucky.   The CCC played an active role in constructing the Pine Mountain State Park.  The CCC provided the design and construction of a gatehouse in the rustic style.  The CCC completed a custodian’s house, service buildings, a ranger station, a water reservoir and pump house, roads, campgrounds, and parking areas.

The CCC consciously designed the Laurel Cove Amphitheater and grounds for the Pine Mountain State Park to be in harmony with the natural cove of the forest at that site.   The buildings and structures were blended into the natural landscape.  The enrollees built an amphitheater, stage, and reflecting pool. 

If the Laurel Cove Amphitheater is the crowning achievement of the CCC at the Pine Mountain Park, the Arch Bridge on Upper Park Road is a close second accomplishment.   The stone bridge is essentially hand made.  This bridge is one the region’s beautiful stone bridges.  This bridge spans a sixty two foot gap between two hills in the park road system.     

Part of the basis for the CCC was that the Corps gave unemployed people work to do.  Many young people had been in situations of impoverishment and malnourishment.  In addition some provision was made for older men who were out of work World War I veterans.   The CCC provided nourishing food and more for its enrollees.  The CCC provided essential education of reading and writing for enrollees that needed this basic schooling.  More advanced schooling was available for those enrollees that could handle the coursework.  The CCC slogan was “We can take it.”   The enrollees showed that they could do more than it was believed that they could do.

The CCC enrollees had a big task set before them.   Woodlots and pastures in the East had been ruined from years of timbering without proper control of erosion.  Great areas of land could be bought for almost nothing after the destruction of the natural features of the landscapes.   The CCC planted and built to try to foster the redemption of the damaged lands.  The sense of the CCC work to restore the natural functioning of the countryside was borne out over the succeeding decades.
The lodge at De Soto State Park in Alabama was built by the CCC.  The building has since been remodeled to be used for a kitchen and restaurant. 

The CCC enrollees left quite a record in Indiana.  The CCC built in Brown County State Park, Clifty Falls State Park, Salamonie Lake State Forest, Spring Mill State Park, and Turkey Run State Park.  The village area at Spring Mill State Park is largely a product of CCC construction. 

The CCC built the lodge at Starved Rock State Park in Illinois and a contractor built the wing with the guest rooms adjoining the lodge.   The huge timbers at the lodge at Starved Rock are a model of the craftsmanship done by the CCC.

“We can take it.” The CCC has been popular because of the organization’s record of accomplishment.  Sometimes the work of someone benefits others long after the original work. People do better when they work together.   Better together;  sounds like an idea for making things better.

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Restoring lands and people



Cumberland Falls State Resort Park - Whitley County, Kentucky


The CCC was established in April 1933 and continued serving until 1942 when the US was entangled in World War II.  Although not without its critics the CCC was a success in its efforts to restore cleared forest lands and the polluted lakes and rivers that were downstream from the damaged lands.
Franklin D. Roosevelt’s mother had a brother named Frederic.  Young Franklin and Frederic got along well and one of their favorite pursuits was to visit a large eastern cottonwood tree in the hamlet of Balmville, New York.  The tree was formerly thought to be a Balm of Gilead tree and the hamlet took its name from the tree.  Estimates put the tree’s beginning to before 1699. Franklin became adept in the understanding of water resources, trees, forests, fish and wildlife. 
Much later in the stark economic conditions of 1933 President Roosevelt brought the needs of unemployed workers and the needs of the nation for healthy forests and pastures together to the successful creation that became the CCC.  In public life he looked about him and saw blessings. People were drawn to him by a spark that he exhibited that was contagious.  His personal way of seeing the blessings inside mixed and difficult situations was probably essential to getting the CCC started.  

Overcoming difficulties, the CCC was started.  It gave unemployed people work to do.  Many young people had been in situations of impoverishment and malnourishment.  The CCC provided nourishing food and more for its enrollees.  The CCC provided essential education of reading and writing for enrollees that needed this basic schooling.  More advanced schooling was available for those enrollees that could handle the coursework.  

The CCC built campgrounds, drinking fountains, fire pits, community kitchens, picnic shelters, tables, restrooms, bathhouses, swimming pools and lakes, beach areas, paths, and footbridges. The enrollees built organizational camps, mess halls, barracks, concession buildings, showers, and playing fields.  Additionally they built trail shelters, trails, ski lodges, and warming huts.  In some places they built ranger stations, ranger's residences, crew residences, bunkhouses, offices, pump houses, garages, barns, blacksmith shops, machine shops, lookout towers and houses, and guard stations.

In wooded areas the buildings were made of treated pine, fir or spruce logs.  In Alpine settings the buildings were made of a combination of stone and rough timber.  In grassland settings the construction was a ranch type construction.  In desert settings the construction was made in the pueblo style.  The style of CCC constructed buildings can be used to identify what buildings were made by the CCC workers.