The Civilian Conservation Corps and The National
Forests By Gerald W. Williams, Forest
Service Historian (Retired); updated by Aaron Shapiro, Forest
Service Historian
Launched as part of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New
Deal after Congress passed a bill authorizing the Emergency
Conservation Work (ECW) Act on April 5, 1933, the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC) made a significant contribution to forestry
and the people of the United States. 
Called the CCC
from the beginning, the name was not officially changed until 1937.
The CCC era technically ended on June 30, 1943, but all the camps
and personnel had been disbanded and discharged by October 1942. One
national emergency, the Great Depression, inspired the CCC while
another, the nation’s entry into World War II, closed the CCC
era. (left: CCC Camp Tieton, Mt.
Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Wash. 1937. Click to
enlarge)
The CCC did far more than simply put people
back to work. Few people have full knowledge of the CCC’s
contributions to the conservation of the nation’s natural resources.
The massive forest conservation program aided fire fighting and
observation, opened large areas of forests through needed trail and
road construction, and provided administrative and recreational
facilities on forest lands.
This brief overview discusses
the conditions that led to the founding of the CCC, the organization
of the CCC camps, and the CCC’s impressive conservation
achievements.
The Depression Era The 1920s were a decade of
unprecedented growth, prosperity and social change. The rise of the
inexpensive, mass produced automobile allowed millions to explore
new highways and byways. Farm people flocked to cities to pursue
jobs on the production line. Credit expanded, allowing many wage
earners to purchase products without ready cash. Stock market
speculation, especially through a system of easy credit, was on the
increase.
Yet mounting inflation
began to erode worker purchasing power and wage increases. At the
same time, the nation stepped back from the international scene
through a policy of isolationism, exemplified most prominently by
Congress’ refusal to ratify the League of Nations pact. (right: CCC Camp Fire Training, Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Wash. 1937. Click
to enlarge)
When the stock market crashed in the fall
of 1929, the things that marked 1920s growth contributed to a long
and depressed economy in the 1930s. Mass production and consumption
meant millions of people were employed in the major industries, such
as steel. When the depression hit, the demand for products and thus
their need for production, fell sharply. City dwellers increasingly
found themselves unemployed. Farmers suffered through severe
droughts, Dust Bowl storms, and restricted credit, often losing
their land. Debts piled up and savings disappeared. Banks limited
remaining credit, recalled loans and foreclosed on mortgages. In
addition, because fewer people lived and worked directly on the
land, city people could not fall back on the barter system for
exchange of food and shelter. Without a cash or credit income, the
economy fell to an unprecedented low.
Responses By The Federal
Government In late 1932 over 13 million Americans, about one
third of the workforce, were out of jobs. People had nothing to do,
nowhere to go, and felt hungry, bewildered, apathetic, and even
angry. Young people were particularly vulnerable and had little hope
for the future, given that they found themselves untrained,
unskilled, unable to gain work experience, and lacking adequate
education. Most did not seek to understand the depression’s causes;
rather they focused on its effects on themselves, their families,
and friends.
The stock market crash
virtually eliminated the credit system, personal and family savings,
and long-term capital expenditures by industry. Consumer demand was
sharply reduced, devastating confidence along with much of the
business structure. The final straw for many came when a large
number of banks and financial institutions, having demanded loan
repayments from people who had no money, went bankrupt. The almost
total collapse of the nation’s financial structure demolished the
public confidence that existed in the 1920s. (left: CCC Powder Monkey Crew, Olympic National Forest,
Wash. 1933. Click to enlarge.)
President Herbert
Hoover attempted to remedy the crisis but to little avail. Despite
the fact that he was not directly responsible for the depression, he
became a scapegoat. Re-nominated by the Republicans in 1932, the
condition of the national economy soured his chances for
re-election. The Democrats nominated Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(FDR), then governor of New York. FDR looked to create a federal
program to intervene in the public and private sectors that would
create a “new deal.” He campaigned on the basic economic and social
issues that were at the very heart of the depression and he
prevailed in a landslide.
Roosevelt took office on March 4,
1933 and his inaugural speech helped change the country’s attitude
to one of careful optimism. His first official act as President was
to declare a bank holiday on March 6th to allow time for the
Treasury Department to check the stability of each bank before
reopening. Thus began the “Hundred Days” in which the President,
with the consent of Congress, produced much of the legislation that
formed the body of the New Deal.
Creation Of The Civilian Conservation Corps On March
21, 1933, FDR sent a message to Congress stating that he wanted to
establish a new forestry relief agency: I propose to create a
Civilian Conservation Corps to be used in simple work, not
interfering with normal employment, and confining itself to
forestry, the prevention of soil erosion, flood control, and similar
projects. I call your attention to the fact that this type of work
is of definite, practical value, not only through the prevention of
great present financial loss, but also as a means of creating future
national wealth.
Congress acted
quickly, passing a bill authorizing the President to act on his
proposed back-to-work forestry program. On April 5, 1933, FDR signed
Executive Order 6101 which officially established the Emergency
Conservation Work Program. The initial selection of men for CCC
camps began four days after the signing of the Executive Order, with
the first camp established ten days later. This first CCC camp, near
Luray, Virginia on the George Washington National Forest, was named
Camp Roosevelt. In early June, a peak of almost 14,000 men per day
were selected and assigned to nearly 1,300 CCC camps across the
nation. By July 1, 1933, three months into the program, the six
month enrollment quota of almost 275,000 was reached. (left: CCC Camp Dinner Time. Click to
enlarge.)
The CCC represented a significant departure
from older work relief efforts that relied on private or small
public efforts for those without jobs. The CCC was designed to “give
each man some sense of his duties as a citizen in American Society.”
It provided unemployed young men with work in the nation’s forests,
parks, and rangelands. The CCC program became one of the most
successful of New Deal back-to-work programs.
As Neil Maher
explores in his new book, “Nature’s New Deal: The Civilian
Conservation Corps and the Roots of the American Environmental
Movement,” the idea for the CCC originated from FDR’s experiences
with Progressive Era conservation and his involvement with the Boy
Scouts. The Scouts promoted the idea that social behavior could be
shaped by manipulating one’s physical surroundings or environment.
Like the Scouts, the CCC brought young men from what many viewed as
diseased urban settings struggling through the depression and placed
them in healthful environments in nature.
CCC Program
Objectives
The CCC program had
two main objectives. The first was to find immediate and useful
conservation work for hundreds of thousands of unemployed young men.
The other, as specified in law in 1937, was to provide vocational
training, and later educational training, for enrollees. Enrollment
or enlistment lasted six months with an option of re-enrolling for
additional six month periods for a maximum of two years. Men were
paid a dollar a day, with $25.00 per month sent home to their
dependents, usually their parents. Remaining funds could be spent at
the camp canteen or for other personal expenses. The government
provided the enrollees with room, board, clothing and
transportation. (right: CCC Camp F-5,
Colville National Forest, Wash. 1933. Click to enlarge.)
Categories Of Enrollees Four distinct categories of
enrollees existed. Most numerous were the young men, or Juniors,
between the ages of 18 and 25 (age limits changed to 17 and 28 in
1935). The Junior enrollee had to be single, from a family on relief
and pass a physical examination. He enrolled for six months, with
the option of re-enlisting for an additional six month periods if
his work was satisfactory. Juniors comprised about 85 percent of CCC
enrollment.
Another group was the Local Experienced Men (LEM)
who served as project leaders in the Junior camps. These men were
hired from local communities and were often previously employed in
outdoor or woods work. They could be married and were allowed to
live at home if the camp was nearby and there were no age
restrictions on them.
Both the LEMs and Juniors were chosen
through the U.S. Department of Labor until 1935 and thereafter by
each state. LEM’s comprised about five percent of total CCC
enrollment.
Veterans of World
War I were another group of older men who could enroll in the CCC.
Several thousand World War I veterans had taken part in the “Bonus
Army” marches on Washington in 1932 and 1933. The earlier march in
Hoover’s administration was dispersed by the U.S. Army, while the
latter march was dispersed by FDR by offering to allow them to
enroll in the CCC. Many second “Bonus Army” veterans opted to join
the newly established work relief program with the administration
creating separate CCC companies and camps for the veterans. After
the initial “Bonus Army” enrollment, Veterans Administration
regional offices chose other veterans from around the country.
Veterans were not restricted by age or marital status. This category
comprised about five percent of total CCC enrollment. (left: CCC Fighting Fire, Columbia National Forest,
Wash.1937. Click to enlarge.)
American Indians and
residents from the U.S. Territories comprised another group of CCC
enrollees. They generally had separate CCC companies and camps on or
in their own reservations or territories, where they could live at
home and work on nearby projects. They were not restricted by age or
marital status. American Indians were chosen by the local tribal
council and the Bureau of Indian Affairs and made up approximately
two percent of total CCC enrollment. Territorial enrollees lived in
the U.S. Territories, which at the time included residents of
Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. These
enrollees were selected by the territorial agency that requested a
CCC camp for specific work projects. Camps were administered by the
Departments of Agriculture or Interior. Territorial enrollees
comprised about one percent of the total CCC
enrollment.
CCC Camp Organization
The basic
organizational units of the CCC were the nine regional corps areas,
which were the same as existing Army Corps areas. Each corps area
was commanded by an Army General. After signing up for the CCC,
enrollees were assigned to a CCC company and reported to an Army
post for conditioning. The companies were then dispersed to a CCC
camp. Later in the program, many enrollees were sent directly to
existing CCC companies and camps without the physical conditioning
period. A CCC company consisted of about 200 men, although several
women’s camps existed in northeastern states, enrolling 8,500 women
before being eliminated in 1937. In the early days of the CCC some
racially integrated camps existed, but these were disbanded in 1935.
By 1938 the number of African-American enrollees reached 10 percent,
and by the end of the program nearly 250,000 served, almost all in
segregated camps. (right: CCC Camp Mineral,
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Wash. 1933. Click to
enlarge.)
At the beginning of the program, regular
U.S. Army officers were in charge of each camp. Within several years
the officers were replaced by Reserve officers from all military
branches. As World War II approached, civilians were allowed to have
command positions in CCC camps. Military officers had authority over
enrollees from 5 p.m. until 8 a.m. The responsible work agency, such
as the Forest Service, had authority over CCC men during the work
day.
Initially, each CCC company was housed in a camp
consisting of surplus army pyramid tents or wooden tent frames.
Permanent camp buildings were later constructed by local community
contractors, unless the camp was in an especially remote area in
which case the company commander had an option of having the CCC
company construct their own buildings. Later, camps were fitted with
inexpensive, prefabricated and portable buildings. Camps were built
around a basic model that included barracks, kitchen, mess hall,
recreation hall, office, latrines, and equipment and storage
sheds.
Many work
projects occurred far away from the main CCC camp and required men
to spend as much as half the work day in travel. As a result, CCC
Director Robert Fechner allowed the widespread use of “side” of
“spike” camps near the work site. Side camps usually consisted of
10-20 men living in tents, with a work supervisor or foreman in
charge. CCC boys often preferred these side camps, which offered
less stringent schedules and a more congenial work and play
atmosphere.(left: New CCC Recruits in NYC
10-3-1934. Click to enlarge.)
In addition to improving
the nation’s forest and park lands, CCC enrollees bettered
themselves. On-the-job training provided CCC crew members with many
marketable skills. Another important method was providing CCC
members a basic education. About one-half of the enrollees had less
than an eighth-grade education and a number of them were
functionally illiterate. Evening instruction offered remedial
reading and writing skills. The CCC educational program also offered
general education topics as well as specialized vocational classes.
Many camps worked closely with local schools while some colleges
offered correspondence courses.
CCC enrollees received
medical and dental care along with opportunities for religious
services and recreational activities. Religious services were
usually provided at least once a month, although many enrollees
attended local churches. Recreation often involved organized and
competitive sports through camp programs. Most camps provided space
for library services, dances, ping pong, card games and musical
outlets. Additional opportunities such as hunting, fishing, and
courting young women in the local community existed for the CCC boys
in their free time.
CCC Accomplishments In The National
Forests
The CCC made
substantial contributions to forested areas, especially the millions
of acres of national forests. Initially, most CCC camps were
assigned to national and state forests, public domain land, and a
few private forests. Later in the program, additional camps were
organized for other state and federal agencies that requested
specific work projects. CCC accomplishments in reforestation, road
construction, firefighting and recreation still yield benefits
today. The CCC left the nation a vastly improved natural resources
balance sheet, including three billion trees planted, 125,000 miles
of truck trails built, 89,000 miles of telephone lines, 800 new
state parks developed, 40 million acres of farm lands benefiting
from erosion control work, rehabilitation of drainage ditches,
better grazing conditions on the public domain, and an increasing
wildlife population. (left: CCC Road
Cosntruction, Columbia National Forest, Wash. 1933. Click to
enlarge.)
During the dark days of the Depression, the
CCC put over three million men to work on conservation projects in
the national forests. A 1933 Journal of Forestry article reported on
the work of CCC enrollees in eastern National Forests, “On the
whole, the men in the camps have taken to the woods work very well.
Many prefer it to work on roads or other construction projects. The
use of an ax is no longer a mystery, and trees are often called by
their first names,” the article proclaimed. Many of these workers in
the woods later found themselves using different sorts of tools as
they served their country in World War II.
Conclusion The CCC was one of the most popular and
successful New Deal programs. It enjoyed overwhelming support from
the enrollees, local communities, various states and territories,
and the nation. Perhaps the most significant product of the CCC-era
was the profound and lasting effect it had on the three million
enrollees. Work in the CCC provided a turning point in the lives of
many of the nation’s youth and it brought much needed financial aid
to their families. In addition, it fostered self-confidence, a
desire and capacity to return to active work, a new understanding of
a great country, and a faith in its future.
Read more details on CCC projects by clicking here >
Additional Resources and Selected
Bibliography
African Americans in the Civilian Conservation Corps
explores the issues confronting African American enrollees in
the CCC and additional information and interviews exist exploring
African American experiences at Camp Pomona on the Shawnee National Forest.
Forest Improvements by the CCC explores
how CCC work aided the protection, administration and use of the
national forests. Foresters estimated that the CCC advanced forest
protection by 20-40 years in its first five years.
Forests Protected by the CCC examines
CCC efforts regarding forest fire, insects, and disease. The
creation of the CCC allowed provided for 24 hour fire control
operations for the first time.
Recreational Developments by the CCC in National and
State Forests explains how almost all CCC work has recreational
value in helping provide access as well as habitat for fish and
game.
Reforestation by the CCC discusses the 22
nurseries manned by CCC labor, as well as thinning operations and
cooperative work with small timberland owners. The pamphlet connects
the restoration and improvement of forests to the restoration and
improvement of self-respect and morale among the CCC boys.
For broad overviews of the CCC, peruse The CCC At Work: A Story of 2,500,000 Young Men
and "We Can Take it": A Short Story of the
C.C.C.
Woodsmanship for the CCC, published in 1937,
suggested that solid woodsmanship involved care with fire, proper
sanitation, acceptance of fish and game laws, and careful
observation, reinforcing the CCC mottos of “Safety First” and
“Better Safe Than Sorry.”
And for some fun, play The Forest Ranger Game in Connection with CCC
Camps.
CCC Legacy
CCC Alumni
R.M. Evans, “Civilian Conservation Corps Improves Stands on
Eastern National Forests,” Journal of Forestry 31 (November 1933):
771-777.
Neil Maher, “A New Deal Body Politic: Landscape, Labor, and the
Civilian Conservation Corps.” Environmental History (July 2002):
435-462.
Neil Maher, Nature's New Deal. New York and London:
Oxford University Press, 2007.
Alison T. Otis, et. al., The
Forest Service and the Civilian Conservation Corps: 1933-42, FS-395.
Washington, DC: USDA Forest Service, August 1986.
John C.
Paige, The Civilian Conservation Corps and the National Park
Service, 1933-1942: An Administrative History. National Park
Service, Department of Interior, 1985.
Sarah Phillips, This
Land, This Nation: Conservation, Rural America, and the New Deal.
New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
John A. Salmond, The Civilian Conservation Corps, 1933-1942.
Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1967.
Joseph M. Speakman,
“Into the Woods: The First Year of the Civilian
Conservation Corps,” Prologue 38 (Fall 2006). |