The following information is excerpted from The Making of a Forester, An Autobiographical
History by Perry H. Merrill
"In March of 1933, President Roosevelt proposed as a measure of
unemployment relief to put unemployed youths aged eighteen to
twenty five to work in our forests. Congress quickly passed the
Emergency Conservation Works Act (ECW), thus creating the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC)."
"This nationwide program was originally designed to enroll about
250,000 youth who must be physically fit, unmarried and unemployed,
have dependents and be willing to send an allotment home to their
families. Vermont was originally allotted an enrollment of 750
youths, which would require five camps. The CCC enrollees were
given $30.00 per month, of which they sent $25.00 monthly to their
parents."
"By July 20, 1933, Vermont's CCC ranks had swelled to ten companies
housed at Camp Wilson ready to start work at once on the East Barre
Dam construction project. The dam was completed almost entirely
with hand labor, and involved the clearing of brush and trees, and
construction of a 600 foot trench for the concrete tunnel under the
dam. This hand work required the use of over six hundred
wheelbarrows, picks, shovels, sledges and drills."
"The completed dam had a 400 foot width with sides sloping up to an
85 foot crest located 60 feet above the crest of the original
stream. It measured 1,500 feet in length with a spillway 100 feet
wide, and required 308,000 feet of earth, 84,000 cubic yards of
rock fill, 200 cubic yards of concrete, and 1,300 tons of steel.
This serves as an example of the accomplishments that took place in
Vermont and other states from this program."
"At the end of six years the number of young men with CCC experience
had reached 2,500,000. The number of Vermont men given employment
under this program was 11,243, and the number of men who worked in
Vermont (regardless of origin) was 40,868. Approximately two
thousand youths from Massachusetts, three hundred from Rhode Island
and a few hundred from New York worked in Vermont camps."
Accomplishments over the life of the CCC:
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Planted 1,255,000,000 tree seedlings over 1,255,000 acres of land
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Fought tree diseases on over 16,722,000 acres
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Installed 64,374 miles of telephone lines to assist in forest fire
protection
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Constructed more than 3,400 fire lookout and observation towers
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Constructed 3,982,000 check dams for nation-wide erosion control
program
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Constructed 41,000 bridges and 44,475 buildings of various types
"Forestry work projects in Vermont included thinning, pruning,
harvesting for state, municipal and private forests, and disease
and fire control projects. Recreation projects encompassed camping
areas, picnic areas, bathing areas, ski areas, roads and trails.
Recreation developments were also made on some state forests
especially where there was water frontage. These projects included
skiing facilities, picnic and camping areas, and bathing beaches.""The majority of recreational development on state forests and parks
was accomplished by the CCC during the years 1933 to 1942. A major
contribution was in the area of fire prevention. Seven new steel
fire towers were built; three new wooden towers and eight new
lookout cabins were constructed. Telephone lines were built or
extended, and valuable fire roads were constructed. Recreational
roads were built. wildlife habitat was improved, and ski trails
were laid out."© Perry H. Merrill 1984 |