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Every section
of the Black Hills has responded to the call of a heavier tourist season,
unfortunately Wind Cave must remain in the same old rut.
Affairs at
the park, are at a standstill due to the pitiful, yet disgraceful lack
of funds.
The
buildings at Park Headquarters compose about the most perfect
haywire outfit we have in the park system. They are a disgrace to
the U.S. Government and the National Park Service.
A Struggling Park
These
reports from 1920s Superintendent Roy Brazell illustrate his frustrations
with operating Wind Cave National Park. Inadequate funding made it difficult
to hire laborers, start much needed maintenance projects, or make any
park improvements. Basic upkeep of roads and buildings was a struggle.
President Roosevelts Civilian Conservation Corps would soon change
the neglected federal land into a national park worthy of the name.
NP-1
On
July 9, 1934, a CCC tent camp was established at Wind Cave National Park.
NP-1, or Camp Wind Cave, annually employed 200 local men. A permanent
camp was built on the hillside southeast of the visitor center. Today,
only one building of the original compound remains. During the summer
of 1935, a side camp was established at Jewel Cave performing projects
similar to those at Wind Cave. NP-1 was transferred to the newly created
Badlands National Monument (now National Park) in 1939. A side camp from
Custer State Park was sent to Wind Cave to complete unfinished projects
and demolish the CCC camp structures. Camp Wind Cave was officially closed
in the winter of 1942, bringing an end to a very effective program and
a new beginning to the park.
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