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Native Americans
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Catoctin Iron Furnace
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Catoctin's Expanded Home Page
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Presidential Retreat
Catoctin Mountain Park was originally submarginal land purchased
by the government in 1936, to be developed into a recreational facility.
The facility was to demonstrate how rough terrain and eroded soil
could be turned into productive land again. The New Deal's Works
Progress Administration, WPA, began the work in the newly created
Catoctin Recreational Demonstration Area, joined by the Civilian
Conservation Crops, CCC, in 1939. Camp Misty Mount was first used
by the Maryland League for Crippled Children. After the first year,
the League moved to a second camp in 1938, Camp Greentop, because
Camp Misty Mount's terrain was difficult to negotiate in a wheelchair.
A third camp, Camp Hi-Catoctin, was completed in the winter of 1938-1939
and was used for three years as a family camp for federal employees.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt was accustomed to seeking relief
from hot Washington, D.C. summers and relaxing on weekends, aboard
the presidential yacht "Potomac" or at Hyde Park, NY. In 1942 the
U.S. Secret Service were very concerned about the President's continued
use of the "Potomac." World War II had brought an attack on Pearl
Harbor and German U boats close in Atlantic waters. Presidential
safety was a concern and Presidential health was also a concern.
The muggy climate of Washington, D.C., was considered detrimental
to his health, affecting his sinuses. A new retreat, a place to
relax, within a 100 mile radius of Washington, D.C. and in the cool
mountain air was sought. Several sites were considered but Camp
Hi-Catoctin in the Catoctin Recreational Demonstration Area was
selected after the President's first visit on April 22, 1942. A
camp was already built on the site and the estimated conversion
cost was $18,650. It was also almost 10 degrees cooler than Washington.
The camp for federal employee's families became the camp of one
federal employee, the President of the United States. Roosevelt
quickly renamed the camp to "Shangri-La" from James Hilton's 1933
novel, Lost Horizon.
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Sketch by FDR of Cabin
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At the close of World War II, there was some debate over the future
of Shangri-La. Should it be returned to the National Park Service?
Should it be maintained as a national shrine or monument? Should
it be transferred to the Maryland State Forest and Park System as
was the original plan of the demonstration area? In a letter to
Maryland Governor Herbert R. O'Connor, President Truman wrote:
I have decided because of the historical events of national
and international interest now associated with the Catoctin Recreation
Area that this property should be retained by the National Park
Service of the Department of the Interior. This action is in accord
with the position expressed by the late President Roosevelt before
his death.
In 1952 Truman approved a compromise under which the land north of
Maryland Route 77 would remain Catoctin Mountain Park operated by
the National Park Service and the land south of Maryland Route 77
would become Cunningham Falls State Park. The official transfer took
effect in 1954. President Eisenhower renamed the retreat, after he
took office in 1953, "Camp David," after his grandson.
Camp David continues to serve as the Presidential Retreat today.
It is a private, secluded place for recreation, contemplation, rest,
and relaxation. Many historical events have occurred at the Presidential
Retreat; the planning of the Normandy invasion, Eisenhower-Khrushchev
meetings, Camp David Accords with Menachem Begin of Israel and Anwar
Sadat of Egypt, discussions of the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam War discussions,
and many other meetings with foreign dignitaries and guests. Maintaining
the privacy and secluded atmosphere of the retreat is an important
role for Catoctin Mountain Park. The Presidential Retreat still
remains within park boundaries but is not open to the public. It
is a place where presidents can relax, unwind, contemplate, entertain
distinguished guests in an informal setting, and cope with the pressures
of modern day society. We hope that you will also understand the
value of a place of privacy for the President and accept that the
retreat is not open to visitors.
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