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President
Franklin Roosevelt signed the bill creating the Civilian Conservation
Corps on March 31, 1933 only 3 weeks after his inauguration. The
plan was to put 500,000 unemployed youths to work in forests, parks,
and range lands.
Rather than establishing a new division, Roosevelt
used existing departments to run the program. The Army ran the camps,
the Department of Labor recruited the enrollees, and the Departments
of the Interior and Agriculture planned the work and gave on-site
supervision. The cooperation among the government agencies was amazing.
Only 35 days passed between Roosevelt's proposal of the program
and the enrollment of the first recruit.
This was a depression era program designed to
provide young men between the ages of 18 and 25 with work and, at
the same time, "regain lost forest land". The initial
call was for 250,000 men. They had to come from families on relief,
be unemployed, and unmarried. Their enrollment period was 6 months,
but could be extended to up to 4 years if they had a supervisory
job. Veterans and "local experienced men" were recruited
as supervisors for the work crews.
The enrollees were paid $30.00 per month, or
$1.00 per day plus room and board. $22.50 to $25.00 of their pay
was sent home to their families. The wages were low, but the program
was designed to get the unemployed young men off the streets and
into productive work.
Initially the men were sent to Army camps for physical training
and then to CCC camps. Generally the enrollees built the camps in
which they lived. The camp at Wind Cave, camp 2754 (NP-l), was organized
July 9, 1934. It was the only NPS camp in the state. The actual
construction of the camp (located where the seasonal housing area
presently is) started August 2, 1934 and was completed October 6,
1934. Though originally established as a "drought relief"
camp, it became a "regular" camp in April of 1935. Most
of the enrollees in the camp were from South Dakota.
Edward D. Freeland
was Park Superintendent while the CCC was here. Howard Sherman was
the clerk and Estes Suter was the wildlife ranger.
The
Park had many projects which afforded excellent training opportunities
for the enrollees. Inside the cave they helped sink a 208 foot elevator
shaft, installed concrete steps, an indirect lighting system, repaired
the cave trail and began a cave survey. On the surface they sloped
banks for park roads, built a fence around the park to contain the
wildlife, built fire trails, dug and constructed concrete reservoirs,
erected or remodeled park buildings, landscaped the Headquarters
area and occasionally fought forest fires.
A side camp
consisting of 25 men was established at Jewel Cave in 1935. The
projects there were similar to the ones at Wind Cave. 25 men worked
there. They constructed a log cabin for park personnel, completed
a new surface trail from the highway to the cave, constructed a
water system to provide water to the ranger station, improved the
cave trail, and began a survey of the cave.
The camp had an education department where the
enrollees could take academic or vocational classes. Through the
music classes, the Wind Cave Quartet was organized. This singing
group became well known through the Hills. The camp also had a variety
of sports teams. The baseball team won the South Dakota CCC Championship
in the years 1935 and 1936.
Leslie Jenson, governor of South Dakota, wrote
the following about the Wind Cave Camp:
"The
Wind Cave CCC Camp is the outstanding camp in the entire Hills from
the standpoint of permanent and visible work accomplished that will
forever inure to the benefit of the general public and the National
Park Service."
A CCC camp was established in Badlands National Park in 1939, under
the direction of Wind Cave. By 1941 most of the men from Wind Cave
had been transferred there and the buildings that had housed the
men were torn down. The camp at Wind Cave was completely closed
in 1942.
For more information
on the Civilian Conservation Corp at Wind Cave National Park click
here (a 40+ slide show - each slide is approximately 50K).
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