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CCC
Opportunity
for All? The story of the Civilian Conservation Corps on the C&O
Canal
The
story of Justice William O. Douglas'
contribution to preserving the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
for future generations has been widely and justifiably told and
retold. A lesser known story of contributions to the preservation
of the canal dates some 15 years before Douglas' famous walk. It
is the story of young men living in a struggling nation attempting
to provide opportunity for all.
In
1939, if you stood where the Carderock picnic pavilion now stands
just outside the I-495 loop, you would have been in the center of
Camp NP-2-Md., the bustling home of nearly 200 enrollees of the
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Young men, between the ages of
17 and 25, lived here year-round as they worked to provide for themselves
and their families while restoring the first 22 miles of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Canal as a national park. As part of CCC Company 333, each
enrollee received dress and work uniforms, was assigned a bunk in
a barracks, and received three meals a day. The enrollee's daily
life was commanded by reserve officers of the United States Army.
Their work projects were supervised by the National Park Service.
Regimented
life in a camp in what was then in a forested and rural countryside
years before the construction of the Capital Beltway and Clara Barton
Parkway must have proved a challenging adjustment for many young
enrollees from Pennsylvania, DC, or Baltimore. Yet, since the nation
was still gripped by the Great Depression, this life may have been
the only opportunity for most of these men to support themselves
and provide money for their parents and siblings. For $30 a month
(of which $25 was sent home) the enrollees cleared the towpath of
15 years of overgrowth, removed rocks and debris from the canal,
resurfaced the towpath, repaired breaches in the canal caused by
the 1924 and 1936 floods, and restored numerous lift locks to working
order. They were also given the opportunity to attend classes in
topics ranging from basic reading to trade skills, mathematics and
even dramatics and history.
Those
enrolled in Company 333 worked with those enrolled in Company 325
(who lived in Camp NP-1-Md. just downstream from Camp NP-2) in rewatering
the first 22 miles of the C&O Canal. Both companies were designated
in the official camp reports as "CJ" or "C-JR."
"J" or "JR" indicated that they were junior
camps (housing men between the ages of 17 and 25 rather than World
War I veterans). "C" indicated that the men housed in
the camps were, in the terms of the day, "colored." These
young African American men who served their country and contributed
to the opportunities we now enjoy at Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National
Historical Park faced the segregated reality of their times each
day in camp. They would also face the sometimes harsher reality
of segregation outside their camps when they went on bi-weekly visits
to Washington, DC, limited in the opportunities they could pursue
even for recreation.
Though
the challenges of racism have not been eradicated, our nation has
come far in providing more opportunities for all of its citizens
since the days of the Great Depression and institutionalized segregation.
The members of the Civilian Conservation Corps on the C&O Canal
and throughout the United States and its territories contributed
greatly to the opportunities we experience today in our national
and state parks and other public lands. It is only fitting that
their contributions be recognized and remembered.
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