
LANDMARK: Yosemite's Half Dome is reflected in the Merced River. Civilian Conservation Corps workers did extensive work in the park.
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, February 1, 2009
The Civilian Conservation Corps put millions to work and left a lasting imprint on Yosemite and other parks.By Julie Cart
![]() LANDMARK: Yosemite's Half Dome is reflected in the Merced River. Civilian Conservation Corps workers did extensive work in the park. |
Reporting from Yosemite National Park — The economy was a shambles. Millions of
Americans were out of work. Saying something drastic needed to be done, the
newly elected president announced a massive economic stimulus package aimed at
repairing the nation's sagging infrastructure and putting people back to
work.
The first "emergency agency" established by President Franklin D.
Roosevelt was the Civilian Conservation Corps, which eventually put 3 million
men to work in the national park system.
By the end of the program in
1942, CCC workers had built scores of bridges, constructed flood-control
projects, cut 97,000 miles of fire roads and planted 3 billion trees, prompting
the nickname "Roosevelt's Tree Army."
The rustic, rock-and-timber
buildings and massive lodges constructed by highly skilled artisans are now
famously part of the national parks' visual style, often referred to as
"parkitecture." In parks such as Yosemite -- where an unusual number of projects
were undertaken -- the CCC's imprint remains.
Now, some in Congress and
elsewhere are reaching back to embrace Roosevelt's Depression-era strategy by
calling for a similar parks restoration program to be included in President
Obama's economic stimulus plan. The House version of the bill has $2.25 billion
earmarked for projects in parks. The Senate version is still under debate and
expected to be voted on Monday.
![]() TRAIL WORK: A CCC crew near Nevada Falls looks toward Yosemite Falls across the valley in 1935. |
![]() GIANT SEQUOIA: Members of the CCC's Camp 5 pose at the now-fallen Wawona Tunnel Tree in September 1934 |
The CCC was born with the Depression in
full roar and one out of four American wage earners out of work. Tens of
thousands of unemployed and hungry young men took to the road rather than be a
burden to their families.
The Labor Department recruited around the
country, and working for the corps became a much-desired job. The program
accelerated so quickly -- 300,000 men joined in three months -- that at the time
it was the most rapid large-scale mobilization of men the country had ever
witnessed.
Each enrollee signed on for a one-year stint and was paid $30
a month -- with a stipulation that $25 be sent home to support their families.
In addition to young men, the corps hired what it called LEMs, or "local
experienced men," to lead work in skilled trades.
Former National Park
Service Director Roger Kennedy, whose forthcoming book about the CCC and the
parks is called "When Art Worked," said the program was intended to heal the
spirit of the workers as well as the nation.
![]() LASTING VALUE: 6,816 CCC enrollees at Yosemite built walls and buildings that remain today. |
"The CCC was a great deal
more than a work program," Kennedy said. "It was an education and nutrition
program. Most of the people who worked there got the first decent meals in their
lives. You could see the people growing, literally, eating good food and working
hard outside. You can see the transformation in the photographs from the
time."
At Yosemite, Jack Rettinhouse and his mother lied about his age --
he was 16 -- and signed him up for the CCC in Fresno in 1937.
In a
sloppily typed letter in the Yosemite archives recalling his time at the park,
Rettinhouse wrote: "I reminber I only weight in at 96 lbs when I went in and
after two years I came back to Fresno and weight in at 145 lbs, so I gusse you
can say the food wasn't bad. . . ."
There were some 600 CCC camps in
various national parks during the program's decade of existence. Yosemite had
more than most, with 10 encampments scattered throughout the park, from the
Valley's meadows to the high country and atop El Capitan.
Yosemite's
archive contains several colorful histories from corps enrollees who were
stationed in the park. The letters of many, who had never been away from home,
were filled with wonder at nature.
![]() FALLING BEHIND: The National Park Service overall has an $8.7-billion maintenance backlog. |
Darrel E. Stover ended his with this
passage: "Yes, I would do it all over again. It was a new life for a nineteen
year old kid. I, like so many of the others, inlisted as a teenager and came out
a man. And it happened in the most beautiful place in the world,
YOSEMITE."
Each camp housed about 225 workers, living in reinforced tents
or wooden barracks. Although the park service directed the work projects, the
Army operated the camps, with daily reveille, chow taken in a mess hall and
military discipline.
Not long after the program began, an educational
component was added, both to train enrollees in job-related skills and to
address the widespread problem of illiteracy. Some enrollees taught their
compatriots to read and write.
"That's when science and history and
education went into the national park system, in a serious professional way,"
said Kennedy, the former park service director.
He said that the
still-new idea of national parks gained a foothold as a generation of men
connected with wild places. "Environmentalism took its largest forward leap in
this country when those people learned it with their hands and with their feet,"
Kennedy said.
Filmmaker Ken Burns focuses on the CCC period in one
episode of his upcoming six-part documentary to be shown on PBS, "The National
Parks: America's Best Idea." Surviving CCC members are interviewed, telling how
the program transformed their lives.
"FDR called the CCC 'building human
happiness,' " Burns said. "The dignity that you see now in the not-at-all-faded
memories of people who as teenagers had their lives reformed, they have had
their molecules rearranged by being in the CCC."
Al F. Monteverde joined
in 1933 after having no luck finding a job. Upon being sent to Yosemite, he
wrote: "We ddint' know what we wre getting into but we all looked at it like the
chance of a lifetime, something to do at last, thank God! Our minds and our
bodies would have something to do."
Work in the park proceeded
year-round. Crews constructed the Wawona Tunnel in 1933, cut the May Lake Trail
and replaced the climbing cables at Half Dome.
![]() GAINFULLY EMPLOYED: Civilian Conservation Corps workers remove thistles in a Yosemite meadow in 1941. |
"The park service was
poised to help the president because we had master plans sitting on the
shelves," said Yosemite's chief historian, David T. Humphrey.
The park's
6,816 CCC enrollees built walls and buildings using rocks and trees in the park.
Those projects remain today and help create Yosemite's rustic look.
"The
work was hard, but we loved it," wrote Leighroy Davis of Waterford, Calif.
"Building rock walls on the down hillside of trail, swinging an eighteen pound
rock hammer all day plus the pick and shovel was turning boys into
men."
Some of the improvement projects were put to immediate use during
the Depression as families from around the region took to camping all summer in
the park to save money.
The National Parks Conservation Assn., a
nonpartisan parks advocacy group, has testified before Congress that the
nation's 391 parks have billions of dollars in "shovel-ready projects," some of
them remnants of the system's more than $8.7-billion maintenance
backlog.
Citing the CCC as a model, the parks group is advocating the
development of a National Park Service Corps and estimates that investing
stimulus funds in parks would create about 50,000 jobs. The group has studied
the economic impact of parks, particularly in rural areas, finding that every
dollar spent at a park generates $4 in benefit.
Construction projects
could be contracted out and stimulate the local economy, said Jon Jarvis, park
service director for the Pacific-West region.
"We have literally
thousands of those types of projects," he said. "The infrastructure of the
national park system has come in fits and starts. It was massive during CCC; now
a lot of those systems are inadequate and failing."
Jarvis, whose father
was in the CCC, said he would like any new park service projects to "set the
standard to be as green as possible, to use that bully pulpit to educate the
public about what they can do."
"There's a legitimate opportunity to make
us part of the stimulus package," said Stephen Martin, superintendent of Grand
Canyon National Park, where some 1,000 CCC enrollees labored. "We have a broad
need for people to work in parks. We can offer employment programs for college
students -- help educate them. We require work from engineers and
accountants."