From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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CCC In Acadia N.P.
CCC in Acadia n.P.
History
THE CCC IN ACADIA
Jack Russell
Il friends of Acadia National Park
A
revere Charles W. Eliot, George B.
Dorr, and John D. Rockefeller Jr., the
visionary founders of the heritage we serve
today. In 2008, all who love Acadia also honor
thousands of young men mustered from
across Maine to work in the park and the sur-
rounding communities as the Civilian
Conservation Corps, whose 75th anniversary
is observed this year. The park still benefits
from the good works of those who came
here in hard times to serve family, commu-
nity, and nation.
When Franklin Roosevelt became presi-
dent in March of 1933, America had endured
nearly four years of the Great Depression.
Thirteen million were unemployed, a quar-
ter of the national workforce. Throughout
Maine, families suffered as towns struggled
to provide relief. In mills from Biddeford to
Millinocket, at the Bath ship yard, and in can-
neries along the coast, workers lost jobs or
took deep pay cuts. The County suffered
most: St. John Valley potatoes sold for half
their pre-WWI price if they sold at all; pay
and jobs in the woods fell. Towns took farm
produce and firewood as payment for taxes
"Early Mess," an oil painting by Hugh Hegh, depicts a typical Civilian Conservation Corps breakfast at the
McFarland Mountain camp.
and gave them to their destitute.
Hard times had also come to our own
island. By 1933, more than 700 unemployed
projects overseen primarily by the U.S. Forest
owned property just south of Long Pond. (A
men from Bar Harbor alone had registered
Service and National Park Service (NPS).
third camp was established near Ellsworth
their need for work.
Enrollees earned $30 a month of which $25
in June.)
FDR acted swiftly on many fronts to pro-
was sent home to their families. The letter of
During the next nine years, thousands of
vide relief and inspire hope. Of all the New
one Maine mother speaks for most parents
young men came to these camps for six
Deal proposals passed by Congress during
with a boy in the CCs: "If you didn't send
months or more to work, learn, and grow.
the Hundred Days, none helped families as
home $25 a month, we couldn't get by."
Most were sons of Maine farmers, woodsmen,
quickly nor changed the American landscape
Superintendent George B. Dorr, ever polit-
mill workers, and quarrymen. Some were
as deeply as the Civilian Conservation Corps
ically-agile, quickly brought the CCC to
high school graduates, more were not. Some
(CCC), enacted on March 31, 1933.
Acadia. By Memorial Day, when Mr. Dorr
had labored in fields and woods but few came
The "CCs," as it was fondly called by
hosted Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes
with employable skills, SO they were eager
enrollees, gave jobless young men new skills,
and National Park Service Director Horace
to learn. As the superintendent of the
basic education, and healthy bodies through
Albright at Old Farm, two CCC camps were
MacFarland camp said, "They eat, sleep,
employment in conservation work. Men 18-
under construction on Mount Desert Island.
work, and think as any other healthy Maine-
25 years old from families in need could
The first was on MacFarland Mountain at the
raised boys do and they are just as interest-
enroll for periods of six months. They went
current site of park headquarters on Eagle
ed in their homes and families as you would
to CCC camps run by the army to perform
Lake Road. The second occupied privately-
expect any Maine man to be." Dorr would
12
Summer tall 2008
Friends of Acadia Journal
write that they "furnished the park with all
baseball, hockey, basketball, boxing, plays,
the labor it has had, road construction apart
"A family visiting Acadia today
and, most important of all, dances. A few
and have enabled it to carry on, uninter-
CCCers married island women and stayed.
rupted, important work."
might camp at Blackwoods,
When other New Deal programs employed
The important work of the CCC enrollees
greet the sun with a walk along
island men with quarry and road-building
endures throughout Acadia. In 1933, once
the Ocean Drive, and enjoy the
skills, they occasionally taught CCC boys, as
they built their year-round camps, they cleared
did the local hands of the Rockefeller road
brush and deadfall for fire control. But from
mid-morning views from
crews, when their work converged with CCC
1934 on, the CCC men maintained and
Beech Cliff every step of
projects, as they did on the Ocean Drive dur-
improved the established trails within the park
ing 1933-1937.
and built new ones. Their labor built most of
their passage through Acadia
The CCC work still serves. A family visit-
the trails in the rapidly expanding "park exten-
would have been opened for
ing Acadia today might camp at Blackwoods,
sion" on the western side of MDI. CCCers
them a long lifetime ago by the
greet the sun with a walk along the Ocean
made many short connector paths to the Park
Drive, and enjoy the mid-morning views
LoopRoad and the growing system of carriage
CCs."
from Beech Cliff. After a swim at Echo Lake
roads steadily advanced by Rockefeller crews.
they could take the Lurvey Spring fire road
over to Long Pond for a walk up the west-
ern side and a picnic on the rocks, followed
by a hike up the Perpendicular Trail to
admire the beautiful stone step work. Their
good day might end at sunset beneath the
century evergreens of Pretty Marsh. Every
step of their passage through Acadia would
have been opened for them a long lifetime
ago by the CCs.
The CCC ended in 1942 with national
mobilization for World War II. Three million
young men had enrolled in the CCC. More
than 90 percent of them served in the war,
fully a sixth of all those in uniform. After the
war, these men and the families and com-
munities they had served were champions for
conservation. Fifty years after he worked in
Acadia, Charles Arnold of York could say, "It
was the best thing that ever happened to me!"
Members of the Civilian Conservation Corps at work
In 2008, we can say that the Civilian
and at play during their time in Acadia. Photos
Conservation Corps was one of the best
courtesy National Park Service.
things that ever happened to Acadia.
Some 14 truck trails for fire and recreational
design standards and, from 1935 on, were
access were built by the boys. They con-
conducted under the careful supervision of
JACK RUSSELL and his wife, Sandy Wilcox,
structed campgrounds and picnic areas, built
park landscape architects.
live at the north end of Echo Lake. When not
27 toot bridges, and planted thousands of
The surrounding communities welcomed
volunteering on Acadia's trails, he flies away
trees and shrubs to help reclaim areas tem-
the CCC boys. They donated furniture and
to advise regional economic development
porarily disturbed by road and trail develop-
books for the camps. (Atwater Kent provid-
organizations on strategic planning and polit-
ment. All of their projects met established NPS
ed a top-of-the-line radio.) Towns hosted
ical communication.
Friends of Acadia Journal
Summer Fall 2008
13
9/9/2015
MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park I Maine Folklife Center I University of Maine
THE UNIVERSITY OF
MAINE
9/11/15
Collections - MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in
Acadia National Park
MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park
Number of accessions: 29
Dates when interviews were conducted: summer 2000 and 2001
Time period covered: 1934-1947
Principal interviewers: Anu Dudley, James Moreira, Pamela Dean
Finding aides: indexes, transcripts
Access restrictions: none
Description: A series of interviews conducted by MFC staff with men who were enrolled in the Civilian
Conservation Corp. in the 1930s and served at one of the three camps run by ANP-the Eagle Lake or Bar
Harbor camp (on the site of the current park headquarters), the Long Pond or Southwest Harbor camp (off
Clark Point Road); and the Ellsworth camp (on the Buttermilk Road). Also included are interviews with
women who married men from the camps and other local residents who remember the camps. Included are
226 photographs (P 8475-P 8701).
2624 Simon Caswell, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 16, 2000 and September 5, 2000. Caswell talks
about his experiences in the CCC at Bar Harbor or Eagle Lake camp in Acadia National Park in 1940: camp
life; work projects; crew structure; recreation; camp and town connections. Text: 42, 39 pp. transcript, 2
four pp. indexes. Recordings: C 1905 , C1906 3 hours.
2625 Wesley Gray, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 16, 2000 at Gray's home in Orono, Maine. Gray
talks about his experiences in the CCC at Southwest Harbor camp in Acadia National Park and Camden
Hill camp, 1939-41: family background; camp life, work projects and crew structure, recreation, camp and
town connections. Text: 52 pp. transcript, 4 pp. index. Recordings: C 1907 90 minutes.
2626 Ron Doughty, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 22, 2000, August 28, 2000, and June, 26 2001.
Doughty talks about his experiences in the CCC in Acadia National Park: camp life; work projects and crew
structure; recreation; camp and town connections. Text: 203 pp. transcript, 5 pp. index. Recordings: C 1908,
C 1909, C 1940, C 1941 7 hours.
2627 Merrill Morang, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 22, 2000 at his home in Rockland. Morang, born
in Lubec in 1918, talks about his experiences in the CCC in Acadia National Park: the effect of the
Depression; CCC application process; first impressions of life in the CCC; description of camp
accommodations; daily routine; camp structure; work crews; worked cleaning brush, making fire breaks,
building roads, and fire fighting; education and training; camp and town connections; lasting impressions.
Text: 59 pp. transcript, 3 pp. index. Recordings: C 1910 90 minutes.
2638 Linwood Robshaw, interviewed by James Moreira at Robshaw's home in Orland, Maine, August 17,
2000, October 13, 2000 and June 3, 2002. Robshaw talks about his work at the Bar Harbor or Eagle Lake
camp of CCC from 1937 to 1940 as carpenter and wood worker: family background; camp life; relations
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MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park I Maine Folklife Center I University
of
Maine
with officers; work in carpentry shop; boxing; framing for concrete dam; carving signs; building and
shingling Thunder Hole comfort station; high school shop training; wood working tools and techniques;
supervisor; boatbuilding; education program at camp; wartime service; postwar service in Germany; work
at Bucksport paper mill. Text: 87 pp. partial transcript. Recordings: C 1921, 1924, 1925, 1985. Photos: P
12923 - P 13030. "Content Report of Linwood Robshaw's Photo Album": 9 pp.
2639 Arthur Studer, interviewed by James Moreira on August 30, 2000 in Studer's home in Mariaville,
Maine. Studer talks about his experiences in the CCC at Gov. Brann camp in Ellsworth: family background;
work as electrician and truck driver before joining CCC; camp life; work as truck driver; town-camp
relations. Also present is E. Studer, relationship and first name not identified. Text: 60 pp. transcript, 6 pp.
tape log. Recordings: C 1922 90 minutes.
2640 Lester Hartford, interviewed by James Moreira, August 18, 2000 and August 30, 2001, at Hartford's
home in Beach Hill, Mount Desert Island. In the 1st interview, Hartford talks about growing up in Leeds;
family background; the Depression; applying for the CCC; being assigned to Southwest Harbor; adjusting
to Army rule; memorabilia from the time; his first of assignments; becoming a carpenter; becoming leader
of a crew; carpentry; Leaders Club; Beech Cliff Trail project; boss Pin Lurvy; forester Ben Worcester;
carpenter forester Jess Atwood; barracks; camp food. In the 2nd interview, Hartford talks about the process
of joining the CCC; first days in the CCC; Beech Cliff Trail project; Ladder Trail project; bos'n's chairs;
cleaning up Beach Mountain; carpentry; Atwood; uniforms; troublemakers; Henry Hinkley's/Manset boat
shop; his career; photographs. Text: 31 pp. and 71 pp. transcripts (.docx and .rtf), 3 pp. log for C 1923.
Recording: C 1923 45 minutes, C 1957 85 minutes.
2641 Walter Woods, interviewed by James Moreira on August 17, 2000 at Southwest Harbor, Maine.
Woods talks about his experiences in the CCC at Southwest Harbor camp: family and work background;
camp life; officers; boxing; clearing brush. Text: 48 pp. transcript (RTF and .docx), 4 pp. tape log (Note: on
the printed version incorrectly labeled cassette in both header and body. Header not continued through the
whole document.) Recording: C 1939 80 minutes.
2644 This accession contains scanned copies of The Acadian a newsletter put out by the CCC. Issues
included are 7/4, 7/18, 8/19, and 11/27 from 1934 and 1/11, 1/31, 2/20, 3/14, 4/5, 4/19, 5/10, 5/29, and 6/17
from 1935. Text: PDF and TIFF scans of 13 editions of The Acadian.
2646 John Parsons, interviewed by James Moreira, February 23, 2001. Parsons talks about his experiences
in the CCC in Acadia National Park. Also included: 12 pp. photocopied documents (missing), 108
photographs. Text: 46 pp. transcript (.rtf and docx) (Note: printed version 55 pp., NA number in header
incorrect, and in header and body it says tape instead of cassette tape.) Recordings: C 1927 - C 1928.
Photos: P 12805 - P 12922.
2647 Myron Zimmerman, interviewed by James Moreira on February 27, 2001 at his home on Bailey
Island in Maine about his experiences in the CCC on Mount Desert Island. Text: C 1929 44 pp., C 1930 22
pp. transcript (66 total for the interview). Recordings: C 1929, C 1930.
2650 Francis Laverdier, interviewed by Anu Dudley on June 21, 2001 in his home in Waterville, Maine.
Laverdier talks about his experiences in the CCC in Acadia National Park: family background; working as
caddy at country club; father was a barber; helped father with construction projects; Works Progress
Administration (renamed during 1939 as the Works Project Administration (WPA); road repair work; daily
life in camp; work clearing brush; building trails, building log cabins on Long Pond; winter carnival in Bar
Harbor; relations with town. Text: 28 pp. transcript, 6 pp. index. Recording: C 1931 88 minutes.
2651 Lurline Tuttle, interviewed by Pamela Dean, May 2, 2001 and July 26, 2001 at Tuttle's home in
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MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park Maine Folklife Center University of Maine
Southwest Harbor, Maine. Tuttle talks about her family's interaction with the men in the CCC camp, which
was just down the road from her home; her marriage to a man she met there; family background; brothers
who hung out at the camp; men from the camp visited in her home; played cards, music, board games;
entertainment's at camp she attended; getting rides to school with men from camp; mother did laundry for
camp officers. Text: C 1932 35 pp. transcript, C 1945 34 pp. transcript. (Note: printed C 1945 is 37 pages.)
Recordings: C 1932 76 minutes, C 1945 66 minutes.
2652 Thomas A. Desjardins, interviewed by Anu Dudley, June 25 and July 2, 2001, Lewiston, Maine.
Desjardins discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; impact of the Depression on his family; joining the
CCC in 1938; initial impressions of the Bar Harbor camp; hitchhiking home and back; barracks; trunks and
storage space; cleaning and organizing the barracks; smokers; laundry; daily routine; meals; influence of
military rules; educational opportunities; crew assignments; life guard training and duty; jobs he worked on;
brush clearing; work in Otter Cove; finding a shell mound; surveying; painting gypsy moth eggs; building a
comfort station at Sieur de Monts spring; later applicability of knowledge he gained in CCC; leisure
activities; learning leatherworking; camp library; unfriendly attitude of local people and summer residents;
leaving the CCC; and joining the Army in 1940. Text: 46 & 43 pp. transcript, plus first copy edited by
Desjardins. (Note: paper copy is 51 & 47 pages respectively.) Recording: C 1933, C 1934 3 hours.
2653 Rene Provencher, interviewed by Anu Dudley, June 28, 2001, Biddeford, Maine. Provencher
discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; his early life; joining the CCC in 1940; getting home to visit;
camp buildings; daily routine; meals; military structure; uniforms; tension between Bar Harbor and
Southwest Harbor camps; projects he worked on; locations of work sites; firefighting; life lessons from the
CCC; recreation; leaving the CCC; later jobs; practical jokes. Text: 48 pp. transcript, printed is 54 pp.
transcript (Note: also some errors corrected by hand on printed pages). Recording: C 1935 79 minutes.
2654 Russell Olson, interviewed by Anu Dudley on June 28, 2001, North Windham, Maine. Olson
discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; joining the CCC in 1937; arrival in Southwest Harbor; visiting
home; barracks; pay grades; daily routine; basketball; meals; military structure; building campsites;
surveying; educational opportunities at camp; and tension between CCC boys and local residents. Text: 33
pp. transcript. Recording: C 1936 90 minutes.
2655 John McLeod, interviewed by Anu Dudley on June 27, 2001, Portland, Maine. McLeod talks about
the CCC in Acadia National Park; joining the CCC in October 1940; arrival in Camden; barracks;
memorabilia and photos; job details; daily routine; meals; uniforms; command structure; duties in Camden;
transfer to Bar Harbor; working as an orderly; beautifying Camden State Park; educational opportunities in
the CCC; baseball and basketball teams; recreational opportunities in town; reading material in camp; and
more photos. Text: 60 pp. transcript (C 1937 only). Recordings: C 1937, C 1941 / CD 2046, CD 2551.
2656 Harvey Ober, interviewed by Anu Dudley on July 18, 2001, at his home in Gouldsboro, Maine. Ober
discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; impact of the Depression on his family; revolting over lack of
food due to a dishonest mess chief; arrival in Bar Harbor in 1936; difficulty of hitchhiking in CCC uniform;
camp pranks; working for the National Park Service; spraying to prevent pine blister rust; brush clearing;
various jobs he did in the CCC; surveying and its benefit to him after the CCC; a leather wallet he made at
camp; meeting his future wife; interactions with local people; his later jobs. Text: 41 pp. transcript.
Recording: C 1942 65 minutes.
2657 Harris McLean, interviewed by Anu Dudley, July 18, 2001, Sullivan, Maine. McLean talks about the
CCC in Acadia National Park; arrival of CCC [McLean's timeline changes through interview];
Rockefeller's involvement in Bar Harbor; CCC boys' interaction with the community; relationships
between CCC boys and local girls; CCC as work welfare. Text: 17 pp. transcript. Recording: C 1943 36
minutes.
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MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park I Maine Folklife Center I University of Maine
2658 Vernon Wardwell, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 1, 2001, Bucksport, Maine. Wardwell
discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; leaving home to work as a farmhand at 14; applying to the
CCC in October 1938; military structure of the camp; expense of smoking; hitchhiking home to visit his
mother; Franco-Americans in the CCC; boys who went to high school while in the CCC; daily routine;
commissary; souvenir pillow cover he bought his mother; seniority and earning stripes; camp officials;
carpentry projects; hip roof buildings; CCC classes; going into town; camp recreation; WWII service in the
Marines; postwar jobs; benefits of the CCC. Text: 64 pp. transcript. Recording: C 1944 90 minutes.
2659 Ken Farrar, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 2, 2001, Bangor, Maine. Farrar discusses the CCC in
Acadia National Park; his childhood; ride from Bangor to Bar Harbor; camp barracks; firefighting;
uniforms; carpentry work; social activities in town; camp baseball team; hitchhiking to Brockton, Mass., to
work; his postwar photography career; 1990s CCC reunion. Text: 31 pp. transcript. Recording: C 1946 65
minutes.
2660 Webster Fox, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 8, 2001, Oakland, Maine. Fox discusses the CCC
in Acadia National Park; applying to the CCC; initial impressions of the camp in 1934; his daily routine;
bad food due to a dishonest captain; military structure of camps; hauling gravel up Cadillac Mountain;
improving roads; truck inspections; limited social activities; leaving the CCC after four months; driving a
milk route; hauling logs; late Depression making hauling unprofitable; working as a welder 1940-45;
vocational training after losing his leg; working as a vehicle mechanic; the value of the CCC. Text: 57 pp.
transcript. Recording: C 1947 68 minutes.
2661 Ulysses "Ted" Morin, interviewed by James Moreira, August 9, 2001, East Hartford, Connecticut.
Morin, with occasional comments from his wife, talks about the CCC in Acadia National Park; hardship
during the Depression; working for farmers in the mid 1930s; moving to town during the winter to be closer
to
school; his mother hosting parties with chicken stew to earn money; entering the CCC in January 1937;
road work for the CCC in Ellsworth; placing granite boulders on Cadillac Mountain; construction of roads
in the woods; firefighting in Bar Harbor; jobs he did in Bar Harbor; use of the tractor; clearing brush;
recreation; interaction with locals; his later careers; brief military experience in 1943; describes CCC camp
photos; the house his mother bought with his CCC money; CCC reunion photos; 1990s newspaper articles
about the CCC. Text: 91 pp. transcript. Recordings: C 1948, C 1949 132 minutes.
2662 Damien Blanchette, interviewed by James Moreira, August 13, 2001, Fort Kent, Maine. Blanchette
discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; his childhood in Stockholm, Maine in the 1920s and 30s;
receiving military surplus; applying to the CCC; CCC boot camp; accommodations at Southwest Harbor
camp; wages; earning extra money by ironing; KP (kitchen police or patrol) duty; jobs related to building
roads; CCC educational courses; using dynamite in road work; recreational activities, particularly music;
transfer to Camden; working in the dispensary and as ambulance driver; serving as staff driver for the
regional commander of CCC; jobs done in Camden; survey of photographs of the Camden and Southwest
Harbor camps; Christmas Day menu; 1940 Camden roster; leaving the CCC when he got a job; joining the
Navy when US entered WWII; career as a Navy baker; serving on ships around Bikini Atoll during atomic
bomb tests. Text: 83 pp. transcript. Recordings: C 1950, C 1951 146 minutes.
2663 Roy Doak, interviewed by James Moreira, August 14, 2001, at the home of Roy Doak in Caribou,
Maine. Doak talks about the CCC in Acadia National Park; applying to the CCC for lack of other work;
camp accommodations and buildings; daily routine; building a sewer line; carpentry; working at the
dispensary; the camp baseball team; leaving the CCC for the Army; interactions with local residents;
dwindling number of CCC workers 1940-41; domestic military service 1942-1945; CCC experience easing
adaptation to military life; awareness of nature he developed in Acadia. Text: 25 pp. transcript. Recordings:
C 1952 62 minutes.
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MF 120 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Acadia National Park I Maine Folklife Center I University of Maine
2664 Eleanor Raynes, interviewed by Anu Dudley, August 14, 2001, at the home of Eleanor Raynes in Bar
Harbor, Maine. Raynes discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; growing up during the Depression,
CCC boys in Bar Harbor; locals' reactions to CCC workers; socializing with CCC boys; her husband's
duties and training; CCC preparing her husband for a surveying career; recreational activities; contributions
of CCC workers to the community; Bar Harbor before it was a tourist destination; the fire of 1947; lack of
CCC in local knowledge by 2001; location of CCC camp and work sites; local supervisors; financial need.
Text: 19 pp. transcript. Recording: C 1953 45 minutes.
2665 Joseph and Priscilla Trafton, interviewed by Anu Dudley on August 14, 2001, at their home in
Southwest Harbor, Maine. The Traftons discuss the CCC in Acadia National Park; minimal impact the
Depression had on his young adult life; joining the CCC; camp officers; working as a crew boss; jobs he
was involved with; brush clearing; putting in culverts; working with the Bar Harbor CCC camp; building
park lawns; camp recreation; his later jobs; minimal impact of Depression on her childhood/young
adulthood; standing fireplace from CCC camp; her one visit to the camp; monthly pay; CCC workers
considered good boys by locals; being introduced to each other by another CCC worker; social activities
where CCC boys and locals mingled. Text: 40 pp. transcript. Recording: C 1954 72 minutes.
2666 Claude Beaupre, interviewed by James Moreira on August 22, 2001 at his home in Rockport, Maine.
Beaupre discusses the CCC in Acadia National Park; positive impact of CCC; sledding; his father signing
him up for CCC; practical jokes in the camp; his travels; CCC work in Millinocket; loneliness at camp;
driving a crawler at the CCC camp in Ellsworth; planting trees out of the Bar Harbor camp; lumbering as a
teenager; meeting Rockefeller's son; responsibility for his assigned crawler; projects he worked on in Bar
Harbor; CCC equipment; placing granite boulders along roads; spraying to prevent pine blister rust; CCC
punishing park visitors for damaging trees; clear chains of command; the Ellsworth roller skating rink; an
unpopular lieutenant; returning to Bar Harbor after leaving the CCC; his later jobs; how the CCC changed
his life. Text: 52 pp. transcript. Recordings: C 1955, C 1956 102 minutes.
3323 Thomas Thornton, interviewed by James Moreira, June 28, 2004, at the Harborside Hotel in Bar
Harbor, Maine. Also present: Ann Haley. Thornton, born in 1914 in Massachusetts, talks about his
experiences with the Civilian Conservation Corps at the Ellsworth Camp; his family's survival during the
Depression; his joining the CCC against his parents' objections; tells stories about life in the camp; saving
the barracks from burning down; boxing matches on rainy days; playing poker; worked cleaning out the
forest in the winter; cut down marked trees; drinking alcohol; boys became men; changes in Ellsworth and
Bar Harbor; getting back his stolen jacket; riprapping; sent money home to his parents; what he did after he
left the CCC; joined the Army in spite of his allergies. Text: 30 pp. transcript. Recording: C 2462, C 2463,
CD 1017 70 minutes.
Back to Collections
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Oral History of CCC at Acadia Park
During the Great Depression, the Civilian Conservation Corps played a
critical role in the ongoing development of the national park system. The
"CC's" (as they often are called here in Maine) operated three camps in
the vicinity of Acadia National Park, where in addition to general forest
management workers, built campsites, trails, dams, and other structures,
some of which still stand. In order to learn more about this important
period in Acadia's history, the National Park Service has contracted with
the Maine Folklife Center of the University of Maine to conduct oral
history and documentary research on CCC activity relating to the Park.
Research will focus on the projects undertaken by the CCC, but will also
include a social history of life in the camps and the relations between the
camps and nearby towns.
The Civilian Conservation Corps grew from the Emergency Conservation
Work Act, which President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law on
March 31, 1933.
Through the program, a quarter of a million people between the ages of 18 and 25 would be
inducted into camps scattered across the country and put to work on a variety of forest
management projects national, state, and, private lands. Detractors dubbed it "Roosevelt's
Tree Army" and said it would not work. They claimed that unemployed youths, especially
those from urban areas where unemployment was most severe, would balk at the idea of
living in camps under military rules and working as junior foresters. But by the end of
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June, 250,000 people had been recruited (the ranks would eventually swell to half a
million). The CCC would become one of the most popular and far-reaching programs of the
New Deal era. By the summer of 1942, when Congress refused to extend it any further, the
CCC had provided shelter, food, employment and family support for over three million
men in over 4,500 camps nationwide.
Over the history of the program, the CCC operated twenty-eight camps in Maine. Those
devoted entirely to forest management work - fire protection or insect and disease control -
fell mainly under the direction of either the National Forest Service or the Maine Forestry
Division. The work of other camps, however, included projects aimed at recreational forest
use, and for the most part, they were supervised by the National Park Service. Three camps
- CCC Company 154, Eagle Lake, Co. 158, Southwest Harbor, and Co. 193, Ellsworth -
contributed directly to the development of Acadia National Park. Three others - Co. 130,
Millinocket (Baxter State Park); Co. 1123, Millinocket (also at Baxter Park); and Co. 1130,
Camden Hills - were put to work on State recreational sites.
Most of the work in Acadia consisted of brush clearing, building fire breaks and access
roads, and pest and disease control, but workers also built, extended, or improved many of
the Park's trails and completed much of the work on the Seawall campsite and a number of
picnic areas. The Ellsworth camp, which existed for less than a year, engaged in clean-up
and beautification along the roads leading into the Park. An objective of the current
research is to compile an inventory of the projects undertaken by the CCC at Acadia, and to
get detailed information on the methods of construction used.
The history of CCC activity at Acadia is well documented in the park's administrative
records, but it also lives in the memories of those who served in the camps and who did the
work. The Maine Folklife Center's researchers are hoping to interview as many CCC
alumni as possible. They would also like to speak with the relatives of former CCC
enrollees, with local residents who remember the camps and the workers, and with former
park employees who may shed light on the ultimate use and disposal of CCC projects.
If you know of anyone who can help us with the research, please contact us at (207)581-
1891, or by e-mail at Folklife@maine.edu.
-Jamie Moreira
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http://www.umaine.edu/folklife/newsfl00oralhis.htm
2/23/2004
Interim Report for an Oral History of the Civilian
Conservation Corps at Acadia National Park
Submitted by:
The Maine Folklife Center
5773 South Stevens
University of Maine
Orono, ME 04469-5773
Phone:
(207) 581-1891
Fax:
(207) 581-1823
E-Mail:
Folklife@umit.maine.edu
Project Administration:
Dr. James Moreira, Director, Maine Folklife Center
Ms. Bethany Haverlock, Admin. Assistant, Maine Folklife Center
Research Team:
Principle Investigator:
Dr. James H. Moreira
Co-Investigator:
Dr. Pamela Dean, Archivist, Maine Folklife Center
Research Assistants:
Ms. Anu Dudley, Doctoral candidate in History
Mr. Kevin Champney, Masters candidate in History
Overview:
Work on this project has been underway since the first week of August. In that time
significant headway has been made on the documentary research and the oral interviews are
proceeding, though we have some catching up to do on the latter front. Overall, the research is
unearthing good materials, and we are confident that the combination of documentary, oral, visual
and material sources will provide a solid basis for both publications and exhibits. The sources
appear to be especially good for recovering and interpreting the work history of the CCC at
Acadia.
As outlined in the plan of work for the project, this interim report will address the
following: it " will outline the documentary sources checked, describe the nature of the
materials located, and give an overview of the oral history interviews, including a brief description
of each informant. It will also review the major research themes and assess how well the data will
allow us to address the key areas of interest to Park staff."
Documentary Research:
The documentary research to date has concentrated on the holdings at NARA's
Northeastern Regional Office in Waltham, MA. In the course of two trips to the site, Kevin
Champney has copied upwards 3000 documents, comprising the contents of 15 of 17 boxes of
materials relating to CCC operations administered by Acadia National Park. A further trip to
Waltham is planned for this month to complete this work. The documents obtained SO far have
been reviewed and Champney is using them to compile a database of all works projects approved
by the Works Progress Administration for Acadia. A full descriptive report on the NARA
documents and the databases constructed from them is appended.
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 2
Included in the Waltham materials are several hundred photographs of CCC projects at
various stages of completion. For conservation reasons, NARA will not permit the photographs
to be reproduced using a conventional copy stand, SO we are exploring alternative ways of making
good quality copies. (Champney has made working photocopies of the images.) We have
contacted a professional photographer in Boston who has experience in reproducing historical
images. An estimate has been requested and we are hoping that the quote will be one that the
budget can support. We are also investigating the possibility of making high resolution scans of
the images, which would be much cheaper provided the quality would be adequate.
Other documentary research has included a survey of the The Bar Harbor Times and the
holdings of the Tremont Historical Society and the Bar Harbor Historical Society. Not a great
deal was uncovered through these sources, but there were some items of interest, most notably a
reference in the BHT to a short film entitled Pilgrim Forests, which explores CCC work in
National Parks including Acadia. A copy of the film has be obtained from Northeast Historic
me
Film. The Dorr family papers at the Jesop Library in Bar Harbor remain to be checked.
The last major fond that needs to be examined is the NARA holdings at the Mid-Atlantic
office in Philadelphia. At this point, we are still uncertain as to the relationship between these
documents and those held in Waltham: are they a completely different set of records, a duplicate
set, or a mix? The most effective means of answering these questions is to have Champney make
an overview of the Philadelphia materials. He is in a better position than anyone to assess the
degree of uniqueness of the holdings and to recommend what parts need to be copied.
Oral History Research:
To date we have completed full interviews with seven CCC alumni and partial interviews
with three others. Approximately 18 hours of interviews have been completed, all of which have
been indexed and transcribed. This is well short of where we expected to be at this stage in the
project. Shortly after interviews began in August, the graduate assistant assigned to help with the
oral history research, Anu Dudley, was offered a teaching assistantship and was unable to
continue with the CCC project beyond the first of September. As a replacement with comparable
experience could not be located right away, we decided to place greater emphasis on the
documentary research at the outset. The decision was influenced, also, by my teaching load,
which this year was significantly heavier in the fall than in the current semester. As of January, we
have returned to interviewing with renewed emphasis and hope to regain much of the lost ground
over the next two to three months. As work on the documentary sources wraps up, Champney
will assist with the oral interviews.
The interviews conducted to date cover a broad range of experience. Each of the area
camps is represented, as is the secondary camp in Camden, and collectively the informants cover
the years from the inception of the CCC program through to its completion. The overall time
spent in the camps ranges from six months (a single tour) to nearly two and a half years, though
the latter is an unusual case. The men we have interviewed represent a good cross section of
experience in terms of the kinds of work they performed for the CCC. Both the documentary and
the oral evidence indicates that the vast majority of CCC men spent most of their time on forestry
projects: brush clearing for fire hazard reduction and beautification, building trails, and pest
control projects. Work of this sort had the double benefit of being labor intensive, keeping large
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 3
number of men busy for extended periods of time, and low cost in terms of equipment and raw
materials. To some extent, the informants who were employed on forestry projects have
generalized recollections about their work. Some, in fact, are more prone to recall incidents that
have little connection to work, such as a member of a blister rust patrol who remembered little of
how the disease was identified and treated, but vividly recalled a day when his group tried to coral
a young deer they came upon in a clearing. Other informants, however, are able to recall the
specific trails they worked on and some of the details of the more demanding parts of the projects.
Three informants, for example, have discussed the process of driving steel in cliff faces while
suspended in a bosun's chair.
While the oral histories provide good information on the construction techniques
employed, design is another matter. The men we have spoken with, so far, claim to have little
knowledge of how trails were laid out or planned. In their words, they simply followed the
directions of the forester. Given that men in supervisory positions were likely to be older, we may
not find informants at this late date who were involved with the design of trails and roads.
We have been very fortunate in that some of our informants worked in very specialized
areas: Lester Hartland and Linwood Robshaw both worked in the carpentry shop at the
Southwest Harbor Camp; Ron Dougherty was company clerk and later supply sergeant for the
Eagle Lake Camp; Arthur Studer was an LEM (locally enlisted man) who worked as a truck
driver. Robshaw in particular gave detailed descriptions of construction and shingling of the
hipped roofs of campground buildings. Not only were shingles handmade with mallet and froe,
but the backs of the shingles were hollowed slightly with a hatchet SO they would lay perfectly flat
on the course below. At the hip joints, shingles were laid in an interlocking pattern, carefully
planed and fitted so as to be water tight. This is a further example of how the CCC was able to
engage in more labor intensive methods than might be possible with a commercial contractor.
Indeed, Robshaw noted with regret that as the buildings have been repaired over the years,
subsequent carpenters have not sealed the hip joints with the interlocking technique, but have
simply laid a pair of battens along the seam. The technique is simple, inexpensive, and effective,
but it is a far cry from the craftsmanship that Robshaw felt he was able to invest in his work. Mr.
Roshaw also gave comparable descriptions of sign making and of finish carpentry in the camp
headquarters.
Q
Remembrances of social life the camps have been mixed. The routine is recalled
consistently, descriptions of camp buildings are uniform but not detailed (though they seem to
have been fairly Spartan, so an absence of detail is not surprising), and camp leaders are
remembered in terms of their general personalities and abilities, but as yet few concrete incidents
have been recounted. In an effort to solicit more detail, we are reviewing the questionnaire to see
if a better, more direct way can be found to obtain more substantive information.
Below is a list of informants interviewed to date, including a brief description of their CCC
experience:
Simon Caswell
From Medway, ME, but lived in Old Town, Hermon, and Newport at different times. Served one
six-month term in the Bar Harbor camp in 1940 before joining the military. Worked on trails and
roads on Cadillac Mountain, Bubble Mountain, and at Sieur du Monts Springs. Spent some time
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 4
drilling holes in the cliff faces to anchor steel rods used to support a catwalk along the cliff. Also
did general construction on the Black Woods campground.
Ron Dougherty
From St. Stephen, NB, though his family moved to Calais when he was quite young. He served in
the Bar Harbor camp for two years from 1937-39. Spent less than a month working on forestry
crews before opting for a job as company clerk. Eventually became Supply Sargent for the camp,
and thus he has a superb knowledge of the administrative operations. Somewhat surprisingly, he
had little or no contact with senior Park administrators, such as Dorr, but his work was more
closely tied to the Department of War which administered the actual camps. Has extensive
memorabilia and photograph collection relating to the CCC.
Lester Hartford
Grew up in Leeds in southern Maine and entered the Southwest Harbor camp in the fall of 1935.
Worked that fall on the Beach Cliff trail building catwalks along the cliff face, and spent the
winter on a brush burning detail. After that he applied for work in the carpentry shop and spent
the rest of his time in the CCC working their. Worked on many of the same projects as Linwood
Robshaw. Has photographs, documents, badges, and other memorabilia from the CCC.
Wesley Gray
From Old Town, served in the Southwest Harbor and Camden camps from 1939 to 1941. Spent
most of his time working on forestry and road building jobs, but served his last six months in
Camden doing some clerical work and also helping with shore front improvements in the camp
grounds. Discussed one project for which the CCC built a circular drive in front of a local high
school (Southwest Harbor). Has photos, including camp officers W. C. Williams, Jesse Atwood,
and J. C. Peck [Atwood oversaw most of the carpentry operations at the Southwest Harbor
camp].
Merrill Morang
From Eastport originally but moved to Rockland as a teenager. Served one year in the Southwest
Harbor camp (1937-38). Worked on many different projects: gypsy moth control, built sewer
lines for the Seawall campgrounds, built fire roads near the Rockefeller estate, worked on the
lighthouse on Cranberry Island, and assisted with the dismantling of the Ellsworth CCC camp.
John Parsons
From Winslow; did two shifts in the Bar Harbor camp beginning in 1933. He left in 1934, but
signed up for another tour from 1935 to 36. Worked mainly on trails and fire roads.
Unfortunately, he is reluctant to be interviewed on tape, but is "thinking about it." He has a large
collection of photographs covering all facets of life and work in the camps. Some of them
suffered considerable water damage in a flood but most are still in good condition. He also has
some bundles of documents, including certificates and a typescript training manual from a CCC
course. For a time, Mr. Parsons worked directly with George Dorr, at a rather unusual task: Dorr
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 5
edited his in-coming correspondence and Parson was given the job of re-copying the revised
versions of the letters.
Eugene Paradis
From Old Town, served one term in the CCC before joining the Marines in the spring of 1941.
Only entered the CCC because none of the services were recruiting in the fall of 1940 when he
entered the job market. Worked in the Bar Harbor camp, primarily on trails and roads. Earned a
certification in handling explosives by working on blasting crews on road work.
Linwood Robshaw
Born in Fort Fairfield, but the family moved several times during his childhood. Finally settled in
Bucksport. Entered the Southwest Harbor CCC camp in December 1937 and stayed until May of
1940. His family knew Jesse Atwood, and because he had manual training in high school he was
given a job in the carpentry shop. He has provided detailed descriptions of his work constructing
sign posts and hand carving signs throughout the Park; also of his work shingling hipped-roof
structures in one of the campgrounds. He also built, on CCC time, a flat bottom row boat for
Atwood's personal use. A photograph of FDR still stands on Mr. Robshaw's desk. Following our
last interview, he called to say that he had found some photos from his time in the CCC, though I
have not yet had a chance to return to look at them.
Arthur Studer
From Ellsworth. Worked briefly as an electrician and truck driver before joining the Ellsworth
CCC camp in 1933 as an LEM (Local Enlisted Man). Spent all his time in the CCC driving a
truck. Carried men and equipment to their work sites, but also provided transport on projects
outside the National Park, such as the dismantling of the radio station at Schoudic and the
relocation of the CCC camp at Bennington. Men at his camp were engaged on road beautification
projects on Highway 3 and other public roads in the vicinity of the park. Left the Ellsworth camp
in August 1935 and was stationed for a while in the Portland headquarters. Has some photos of
his trucks and the camp, plus a CCC issue shaving kit and other memorabilia.
Walter Woods
Born in Rockland and grew up in Blue Hill. Spent a year in the Southwest Harbor camp from
1933 to 1934, and was employed on forestry projects. Mr. Woods is quite aged and his memories
are not especially clear, but he had some good observations about the camaraderie of the CCC
crews.
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 6
Research Themes
The plan of work identified seven thematic areas that would likely serve as chapter headings in the
final report. The following paragraphs briefly outline how the information recovered will enable
us to address those themes.
1) Introduction and historical overview of the CCC camps administered by Acadia National Park:
The camp records held by NARA will be the strongest source for this section, as they give
both itemized and summary accounts of the year to year progress of each camp. A clear
timeline for each camp and the transitions in leadership can be established (though we
have not yet establish absolutely when the camps were finally disbanded), and
correspondence in the NARA files has enabled us to sort out the re-assignment of the
Ellsworth camp in 1937. We've been keeping an eye on project developments and
changes in administrative procedures that might point to transitions in the overall
philosophy of the CCC, though we have yet to find indications of a marked shift in policy.
The favored projects through the life of the program appear to have been those that kept a
lot of men occupied with relatively little investment in equipment and materials, hence a
steady emphasis on trail construction, brush clearing, and pest control. There are
indications that by the late thirties some projects included activities that may have had
military implications, even though the CCC officially maintained its non-military mandate
til the end.
This section of the report was to include profiles of or at least a discussion of the chief
administrators who planned the work on behalf of the park. This is one area where neither
the oral testimony nor the documentary record is particularly strong. (Granted the Dorr
family papers have yet to be surveyed.) None of our informants claim to have substantive
knowledge of how projects were planned or of what design principles were used. Nor do
they claim to have had much direct involvement with senior park staff. Only one
informant, John Parsons, acknowledges having any degree of contact with George Dorr,
and the work he performed for Dorr does not appear to bear directly on CCC operations.
Perhaps out best guide to understanding the planning process will be from a close reading
the work proposals, to see how specific kinds of projects are prioritized and justified.
2) Physical description of the camps:
We have many sources to draw on for an impression of what the camps looked like and
what they were like to live in. There are many photographs available showing both the
earliest days when the men were housed in tents and the established camps. John Parsons
has provided us with shots of some secondary camps, which for the most part were dining
stations where the men congregated to eat when they were too far out in the woods to
return to camp for lunch.
3) Work projects:
Again, very strong material is available for research on this topic. The documentary
records cover virtually every project undertaken from proposal to conclusion (missing
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 7
project numbers appear to represent projects that were applied for but not approved). In
the case of trail construction and brush clearing, the descriptive details in the written
record tend to be sparse, but "before and after" photographs in the project reports provide
a visual means of assessing the work. For more specialized projects, the applications and
reports tend to give quite good descriptions of objectives and the work required to
accomplish them.
Given that some three hundred project applications were approved for Acadia National
Park, a good deal of condensation and generalization will be necessary when writing this
chapter. We will strive to give as comprehensive a view as possible of the many kinds of
work undertaken by the CCC, including some interesting experimental projects, such as a
series of radio trials made to test the effectiveness of UHF radio as a fire fighting tool.
Where particularly large projects are involved or where especially good descriptions are
available from documents or through interviews, we will have an opportunity to go more
deeply into the work techniques employed. As noted above, we have spoken to a couple
of informants who have good knowledge of the construction techniques used on certain
projects. We are trying to locate someone with knowledge of the stonework that was
done, but SO far we have come up empty. One informant felt that this work may have
been contracted out to a professional mason.
In the course of the research, we have become especially interested in the forest
management work undertaken by the CCC at Acadia, since our reading indicates that such
work was quite new at the time. We have contacted researchers at the University of
Maine's Forestry School to help us learn more about the pests and diseases that the CCC
foresters were trying to control, and also to learn about historical developments in forestry,
that may help us interpret the work that was being done by the CCC.
4) Camp demographics:
Relatively little headway has been made on this part of the project to date. The oral
evidence is that most of the enrollees came from Maine, though this may be less true of
the Ellsworth camp. In the documentary record, there are several lists of enrollees and
their home location, though we haven't yet made a tally of the lists to see if we have all
years for all camps.
5) Occupational folklife in the camps:
We have broad range of information on this topic, but as noted above we are hoping to
refocus some our interview questions in order to add depth. The basic routine of camp
life - induction, daily schedule, division of work crews, meals, recreational opportunities,
leave, and discharge - is well covered. A couple of informants have also told us about
practices or events that helped bond work crews together as a unit: things like sending
new inductees on "fool's errands," practical jokes, methods of settling disputes, special
sights or encounters with wildlife, informal competitions between work crews, and so on.
Several of the informants also have photographs that help to illustrate the social side of life
Acadia National Park, CCC Project - Interim Report: Page 8
in the camps. We hope to solicit more of these kinds of materials, because when we ask
informants what they value most about their CCC experience, the response invariably is
that it taught them to live and work with other people. We want to be able to demonstrate
as concretely as possible what that process of living and working together entailed.
6) Town/camp relations:
Our informants have offered mixed views on this matter. Some feel they were treated well
by local residents, while others are critical of their reception on the island. So far, no
incidents have come to light that would point to deeply rooted tensions. We will hopefully
get a more comprehensive view of this theme as we start to interview residents of Bar
Harbor, Southwest Harbor, and Ellsworth. The documentary record contains some
material pertaining to town/camp relations, and it too points to largely positive
interactions. Problems of course come up, but in the correspondence one tends to find
administrators trying to dispel rumor and insinuation rather than making amends or taking
disciplinary action for specific acts. Equally if not more significant are the letters of
support from town leaders calling on Washington to extend the program when Congress
threatened to terminate it.
7) Educational mission of the CCC:
Few of our informants appear to have taken advantage of the evening educational
programs available to CCC members. A few had no involvement and at least one signed
up for a course that he did not complete. There are exceptions, however; John Parsons
took a forestry course in the CCC and he still has the typescript training manual. Most
informants acknowledged that there were men in the camps who were able 10 get high
school equivalency and that there were cases where even basic literacy was taught. Again,
however, such information is usually presented in general terms with few specifics. On
the
job training is another matter. Most of the informants claim to have learned at least one
occupational skill in the CCC, ranging from heavy equipment operation, specialized
carpentry skills, to handling explosives. A number of informants still have certificates of
competency issued by the CCC. This is another area that we hope to learn more about as
the interviews proceed.
One source has come to light that may contribute to our knowledge of education
programs. As a result of the article in the Acadia newsletter, we received a call from Mimi
Barnes of Mount Desert whose father, Ernest Mills, was the chaplain at the Eagle Lake
Camp in the late thirties. Though Mr. Mills died in the 1950s, the family still has his
diaries, in which he discusses, among other things, the evening courses he taught for the
CCC.
154th Company
Eagle Lake Camp (Bar Harbor, Maine)
(May 1934 - June 1942)
The Eagle Lake Camp was supervised by the National Park Service.
of the work of the 154th Company concerned blister rust control, fire hazza
reduction, landscaping, trail construction, selective pruning, and genera
clean-up of Acadia National Park.
Fred Spear, of West Auburn, Maine, was one of several from Auburn in
154th
Company. He states, "We were part of the very first to go in when
C.C.C. started up, and went to Fort Williams originally. After minimal 'Basi
Training' and less than the prescribed preparation we were trucked by
Fifth Infantry to Eagle Lake Camp site, just beyond Cadillac Mountain in Bar
Harbor. We were dumped there with tents and field ranges and had to do it
ourselves - - to eat, sleep, etc. That was in the Spring of 1933, and we built
quite a camp in the next few months. The main work in Acadia National Park
was blister rust control through eradication of the gooseberry link."
William MacFarland, of Wiscasset, Maine, enlisted in the C.C.C. im
January 1934 and was discharged in May 1937. He relates his experience in the
154th Company by recalling: "For the first three months I swung an axe, them
for a year and a half I was a transit man for Acadia Park Engineers doing
boundary and road surveys. The final year and a half I was Supply Sergeant or
Store Keeper. It was up to me to keep the boys clothed and furnish clean
bedding, make sure they had mess kits, etc. It was also part of my job to
furnish tires and parts for the Army trucks, as well as suitable kitchem
utensils, pots and pans for the Mess Hall, sports equipment for the Recreation
Hall, etc."
Another enrollee at the Eagle Lake Camp was Howard H. Milliken, M. D.
He details his service at the 154th Company as follows: "At Fort Williams we
were all put up in cots in barracks, issued the standard C.C.C. clothes. This
consisted of Khaki pants and shirts, military shoes and fatigue hats. We were
all given a physical and shots. After this was completed, which only took two
plus days, we were divided into groups. Many of the men were sent to the
Greenville camp, about 16 or 20 of us were sent to Eagle Lake Camp Co. 154
Bar Harbor, Me., a short distance from beautiful Eagle Lake and in clear view
of Cadillac Mountain. This I was to realize, is one of the most picturesque
scenes in the world. The Mountain comes out of the seas of Frenchman's Bay
part of the Gulf of Maine and the Atlantic Ocean.
"At the time I arrived at the 154th Co., the Headquarters building was
established. The first building was the Mess Hall which was composed of a
large kitchen and a large dining area. Here we had large group tables to eat
from and benches attached to tables for seats.
"There were two barracks completed and a third nearly completed. We
were quickly assigned our cots for the duration and were told how to keep our
beds neatly made, hang our clothes and place our boots. Quickly we fell into
the routine of the camp.
"I should mention at this time that the latrine was an open pit with a
covered shelter and men were assigned to see that this was kept clean. This
was difficult, but it was inspected daily and always kept up to snuff.
"Bear in mind that virtually all members of the C.C.C. were unemployed
who for the most part had been eating limited rations because of lack of
mey to buy food. The country was in a deep depression.
"The food at the Eagle Lake camp was good wholesome chow that the cooks
oked en masse in giant pots or vats. There was always plenty of it. The
ood was hot and it was self service as you went down the line.
"The atmosphere in the dining room was jovial and friendly. Everybody
grateful for good wholesome nourishing meals with enough food to always
tisfy every appetite.
"After the meals we had clean metal garbage cans which were filled with
iling water with good soap suds. These two cans were set over a fire to
the water boiling. The first can was to wash off the canteen, messkit,
ife, fork and spoon; the second can of clean boiling water was to rinse the
ting utensils. The water was changed as soon as it got dirty. There
were
cans with two lines of men going down one line on the right and another
on the left of the cans.
"At no time while I was there did we have any dysentery or cross
fection from the eating utensils.
"One day while waiting in line to wash the dishes Eleanor Roosevelt
Wife) came to our camp. She asked the boys how they liked the food and
life, all responded that the food was better than anyone had had during
ir life, they also said they enjoyed camp life and the work projects.
Personal
"This truly represented the feeling of all enrollees, obviously the
Writ
C.C. was doing a good job in one of its missions. This was to keep the
le busy and to keep them off the streets.
"Capt. Deroin was our Commanding Officer. I found out the Capt. was a
duate of Amherst College. He was activated into the Army from the
erves. His dress was quite immaculate and his carriage was real military,
brown eyes, neatly parted hair, well groomed brown suntan shirt and
He wore leather puttees and neatly shined shoes; he was a fine figure
a
man. He had no trouble making good and firm decisions, he was a good
riplinarian.
"With his military bearing he would make inspections of all the
tracks, mess hall, latrine, grounds and office each day at 9 a.m. He knew
man in camp and he knew his job. With all this he had a good sense of
and frequently kidded with the men. He was a good leader and he led us
"Lieutenant Harris was our number two man in the echelon of camp
gement. He was physically smaller than Capt. Deroin and stayed somewhat
the
background. He did his job well in a very unassuming manner. He was a
company man', who got along well with his Chief. He also was well liked
the boys despite the fact that he spent a lot of time in the office and
efore was less well known.
61.
"As everybody knows, a first sergeant is a powerful figure in the Army.
He sees and enforces all decrees or orders from above. This is true in the
Army and was also true in the C.C.C. Sgt. Holmes was a rather massive man who
had spent long years at desks. Therefore he was obese and fat as we all
thought. He was very pleasant and especially well liked by the troops. He
too dressed in Army sun tan shirt and pants and wore an overseas cap.
"He was regular Army, he had greater than 20 years of Army service and
had the stripes and hash marks to prove it. As I think of it, he was really
my first exposure to a regular Army soldier. His manner was great and
remained a good example of how a soldier should live.
"Later in my life I was to spend nearly four years in the Army, 1942-45
in the European Theatre and be exposed to many soldiers. However, in the back
of my mind, I always remembered Sgt. Holmes as a true soldier and as they say
about 'Tuborg Beer', he had class.
"Mr. Conners was our Chief Forester and reforestation was what the
C.C.C. was all about. Therefore he was in charge of all the crews during the
working day from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mr. Conners was a man about 6' 2" tall.
He had a big frame with broad shoulders and his hair was graying. He was the
only man in camp who dressed in civilian clothes. Apparently he was not in
the formal C.C.C., but he was on loan probably from the State. Nevertheless,
he was an integral part of our unit and like Capt. Deroin, Lt. Harris and Sgt.
Holmes knew all the men and they knew him. He managed the crews.
"There were other members on loan to the 154th Co. Two of them were
engineers employed by the National Park Service on Mount Desert Island. One
was a Mr. Higgins, who was an older man with a great sense of humor, he was an
engineer. The second engineer was a Mr. Sherman who was younger, bright,
pleasant and helpful. It was my privilege to work some with these 2 men.
"The standard surveying crew has an Engineer and usually a front and
rear rod man. The engineer runs the transit and tells the front and rear rod
men when to set the point. In this way land can be surveyed. Lines can be
run straight or at any angle that the deed may call for, and in any direction,
North, West, East or South. Our crew was led by Mr. Higgins and Sherman, our
transit man was Don Boone. Front rod man was a boy named Small. I served as
rear rod man. We surveyed Schoodic Point on one side of Frenchman's Bay. It
took us 2 hours by car to get there and 2 hours to get home. We surely
enjoyed our rides to and from work riding in a rumble seat. In the keeping of
a camp the size of the 154th Co., there were many varieties of jobs from
cooks, to helpers, to office workers to K.P. to latrine duty to wood cutters
to workers in the Dispensary.
"Somehow I got to work for a period in the Dispensary. My father was
a
physician, my aunt was a nurse, and I had a great uncle who was a physician on
Mount Desert Island and 2 uncles who were physicians. Later I was to study
medicine. This dispensary duty was my first exposure to caring for the sick
and I liked it. The dispensary was located at one end of barracks #2. It was
a room about 12 by 14 feet. In this we had a bed, a dressing table which had
anteseptic, iodine and mercurochrome, throat sticks, cotton applicators and
aspirin, adhesive tape, 4 X 4 gauze, some suture material and needle holders.
These were our work materials.
"We had a Lt. Sherwin who was an M.D. He was assigned to three C.C.C.
Camps. One in Ellsworth, Southwest Harbor and the 154th Co. at Bar Harbor.
It was his custom to visit each camp daily, where he held sick call. Our job
was basically giving occasional first aid and lining up patients for Dr.
Sherwin. The Lieut. did not live at our camp. I believe he made his
headquarters at the Ellsworth camp. He dressed in Army clothes and wore his
1st Lt. bars. I really did not get well acquainted with him, but he was
professional, efficient, and we had no serious illnesses or epidemics while I
was at the 154th Co. The head of our dispensary crew was a man named Kelley
who came from Portland. Kelly will always stand out in my mind. He had a
delightful sense of humor and could kid with the sick-call patients. This in
itself would make them feel better. I remember on one occasion when Capt.
Deroin and his inspection staff passed through the dispensary, Capt. Deroin
noticed some article that had not been picked up and stored in its proper
place. He picked up the article (I do not remember what it was) and handed it
to Kelley and asked 'What about this?' Kelley looked at the Capt. and said
with total surprise, 'Where did you get that?' The Capt. looked at him with a
wry smile and the Inspection continued. It was at that moment that I learned
that a serious situation can often be made light with the proper attitude and
appropriate jest. I have often applied this approach to a somber or serious
matter, usually with the same good results. For this I am indebted to friend
Kelley of the 154th Co., C.C.C. for a lifelong useful practice.
"The Pine Blister Rust program became the main function of the 154th Co.
Our area was to start on Mount Desert Island and then spread as directed by
Mr. Neil Viollette, our Chief Forester. Mr. Conners picked his crews, 6 or 7
men and a foreman. This took a lot of men to cover an area. It gave work to
many men and continued a needed program that had been in progress for years.
All the men were happy. They felt useful and needed. It was something that
every able bodied man could do. It produced healthy, happy campers. Our
morale was very great. Truly, it was like a shot in the arm to each camper.
"One of the first buildings established to the 154th Co., was the
Headquarters building. The back part of the building was for sleeping &
housing quarters for Capt. Deroin and resting areas for Lt. Harris, Sgt.
Holmes, Mr. Conners and other top brass.
"The front part of this building was the offices for all. This was not
a large area but included a desk for Capt. Deroin, Lt. Harris and another desk
for Sgt. Holmes. All entries to the office went through Sgt. Holmes. There
was also room for a Company Clerk. At one time-for about three weeks, I was
assigned to the office and enjoyed my exposure to these fine military men
and
to Eugene Arata who was Co. Clerk.
"Records of all the men were kept here-- sick call, home address, any
leaves, disciplinary problems and all communications from higher echelon were
stored here. The office ran smoothly and again the morale at the top was
excellent, guided by Capt. Deroin and ably assisted by Lt. Harris and Sgt.
lmes.
"Retreat at the 154th Co. was conducted about the same as any Military
post. We had a nice flag pole and retreat area in the front of Company
Headquarters. The men were called into formation by Sgt. Holmes. We lined up
63.
Field kitchen and lister bag of the 154th Co., , Bar Harbor, 1934.
154th Co , Bar Harbor, McFarland Field with aerial view of the C.C.C.
camp and Cadillac Mt., , 1935.
65.
158th Company
Great Pond Camp (Southwest Harbor, Maine)
(May 1933 - September 1941)
Another camp under the direction of the National Park Service and
responsible for working in Acadia National Park was the Great Pond Camp. The
men of the 158th Company worked on suppressing forest fires and built several
miles of fire trails in the park area. They also cleared acres of burned
trees that posed a fire hazzard.
The company built many scenic trails throughout the park and developed
recreational facilities on the beaches of the park's lakes. As Ensio Matson,
now of Haworth, N.J., says, "Among my duties (at the Southwest Harbor Camp)
were pine blister rust control, road building, digging drainage ditches, and
landscapping.
A description of the early years of the camp is offered by Fred E. Holt,
former forest commissioner:
"The Southwest Harbor camp was opened about May, 1933 with enrollees
recting and living in tents while construction of the roll roofing covered
arracks continued. An aerial photo dated September 5, 1933 shows four
arracks buildings and four service buildings in place. Officers quarters,
spensary and living quarters for the Commanding officer were added later.
last two were of log construction.
"The camp was located at the height of ground on the west side of the
ad
leading from Southwest Harbor village to the south end of Great Pond.
is was near Acadia Park lands where most of the work-projects took place.
is park being one of the National Park System came under the jurisdiction of
U.S. Department of the Interior. Consequently the Department of the
erior controlled the employees and type of work projects carried out on the
und.
"This was a typical 200 man camp. All enrollees were Maine residents.
ilial relationships were scarce but for most living conditions were a great
provement over depression years living conditions at home.
Living
editions, discipline and in-camp activities were the concern of the U.S.
"One of the highlights of the summer of 1935 was an inspection visit by
art Fechner, Director of the C.C.C. from Washington, D.C.
"The log visitor center at Echo Lake was to be the site of a noon dinner
Fechner, his staff and probably fifty other dignataries from state and
areas. Landscaping the grounds was a major project -- all raw soil had
covered with leaf mold collected by the basket from outlying areas and
read. All walks and nearby trails had to be surfaced with tan bark.
was hemlock bark of coin size recovered from the tanning process. The
ult was a path of light pink to rose colored surface flanked on both
by ancient weathered leaves. Fechner appeared impressed but it's
ful he was taken in by the ancient appearance paid for by his budget.
67.
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Thursday, May 20, 2004 11:23 AM
To:
'James Moreira'
Cc:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
RE: Acadia & George Dorr
Dear Jamie,
I spent Monday at the NARA facility in Waltham pouring over the ECW/CCC material relative
to Acadia National Park. It was a useful exercise and I came away with a new appreciation
of the administrative workload of Asst. Superintendent Benjamin Hadley.
Over the past two days I've been reviewing your October 2002 "Civilian Conservation Corps
at Acadia National Park" which Brooke Childrey provided. Your work has helped me better
understand the importance of the CCC to park development when you provided the
justification for the assertion that "the CCC provided ANP with resources that it has not
known before or since."
While I am still reviewing this document, perhaps you could field a couple of questions:
1. Is there a more polished version available? Has it been finalized? 2. I saw no
bibliography other than what was embedded in the footnotes. Is there one? 3. There appear
to be no citations to seminal monographs of a more general nature dealing with the ECW,
CCC, and the NPS. Were these to be added later? 4. Two years ago I spent several days at
the Harpers Ferry Center using the NPS historical collection as well as the reference
services at the nearby NPS Conservation Center. www.nps.gov/hfc/library/ccc.htm. I
wondered if you had investigated. 5. I was intrigued by the discussion regarding the role
of aesthetics in ECW projects and its context within the twin mandates of the 1916 NPS
Organic Act: to both preserve and make accessible park lands. My research has yielded
several significant articles on these conceptual issues should you be interested. 6.
Finally, on three minor points. I recall seeing ECW/CCC material on earlier visits to the
Rockefeller Archive Center. You make reference to "Jr." but I saw no indication that you
had investigated this awesome repository. I'm planning a July visit and could investigate
if this project is still ongoing and you would like me to pursue it. Second, Olmsted
Landcape Architect Margie Coffin is the author of the study credited several times to
Chris Barter. Third, on page 149 you state in the final sentence that "we hope to be able
to correlate the various trail reports in order to give a more complete overview of
Acadia trail development during the CCC era." Was this realized?
And lastly, were you able to make contact with Mr. Parsons or his family as you indicated
in your most email to me?
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
Director of Shapiro Library
Southern New Hampshire University
Manchester, NH 03106
603-668-2211, ext. 2164
603-645-9685 fax
Original Message
From: James Moreira [mailto:James Moreira@umit.maine.edu]
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2004 3:02 PM
To: Epp, Ronald
Subject: Re: Acadia & George Dorr
I haven't had a chance to contact Mr. Parsons (or his family) yet but will do so this
1
week. Re. the Richard Hale Collection, there is an index, but it does not appear to refer
to Dorr or ANP. Note, though, that this is a fairly small collection.
Our accessions are searchable through the URSUS library catalog, which is accessible
through the University of Maine's website. You may find that resource helpful.
Cheers
Jamie
"Epp, Ronald" writes:
>Dear Jamie,
>
>I appreciate your offer to use CCC material for my biography of Mr.
>Dorr. Your comments about Mr. Parsons fuel additional interest in him
>despite his restrictions on your use of his comments about Dorr. Since
>your email on March 18th have you had an opportunity to determine
>whether "he is still with us"? If he is and you would share his full
>name and address with me, I'd like to write him a letter and see
>whether he will agree to be interviewed by me--either on or off the
>record.
>
>I will try and schedule a visit to the MFC in the weeks ahead. I am very interested in
MF043, 062, 086, 113, 119, and of course 120. Could you have someone on your staff
determine whether there is a finding aid for MF 086 (Richard Hale Collection).
>If so, could it be surveyed for any indications of discussions about Mr. Dorr or the
Park?
2
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
James Moreira [James_Moreira@umit.maine.edu
Sent:
Thursday, March 18, 2004 11:41 AM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Re: MFC, ANP & George Dorr
Dear Mr. Epp;
My apologies for taking so long to get back to you. I have had several pressing deadlines
in the last month and am just now getting caught up.
By all means, you are welcome to use whatever material we have compiled for the CCC
project, though relatively little of what we uncovered relates specifically to Dorr. The
CCC men with whom we spoke had very little contact with the higher-ups in the Park
administration. The individual you mention worked as an assistant to Dorr in an informal
capacity, and from what I recall, spent most of his time filing papers. When I
interviewed Mr. Parsons, he was uneasy about discussing his relationship with Dorr, though
I don't know why, and he called me up after the inview and asked that his comments about
Dorr be restricted. Parson's was very forthcoming on other aspects of his time in the CCC
and in fact was immensely helpful. To be honest, I haven't seen him in some time, and he
was 93 when I interviewed him, SO I'll have to check to see whether he is still with us.
As for the project database, it is not complete but is usable. When I was compiling the
report, I found the actual Park correspondence more useful. We have copies of the reports
here at the Folklife Center.
Please feel free to get in touch or visit at any time.
All the best
Jamie Moreira
"Epp, Ronald" kr.epp@snhu.edu> writes:
>Dear Professor Moreira:
>
>For the past four years I have been intensely involved in an
>archival-based biography of George B. Dorr. Curator Brooke Childrey at
>the Sawtelle Archives at ANP has been very supportive. During my
>December visit she permitted me to copy portions of your interium report for an oral
history of the CCC at ANP. I am currently examining it in detail and making comparisons
with related CCC manuscript material I have examined at the National Archives (College
Park), the NPS Historical Collections (Harpers Ferry W VA), the Rockefeller Archive
Center, and the Dorr Papers at the Jesup Memorial Library.
>
>It may be useful for us to meet and discuss our overlapping interests
>more fully. For example, is the database project of all works projects
>approved the the WPA for Acadia completed? If so, is it accessible to researchers? On
another front, you mention an interview candidate who worked closely with George Dorr but
has been reisting your overtures. Any recent success? If you provide contact information,
would you mind if I approached him?
>
>I've taped quite a few interviews since last spring which have not yet
>been transcribed and which may prove of interest to you.
>
>If I whetted your appetite, please contact me. I journey to MDI often and could easily
arrange a detour to the MFC when I next visit in mid-March.
>
>
>
>Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Monday, April 12, 2004 2:16 PM
To:
'James Moreira'
Cc:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Acadia & George Dorr
ear Jamie,
I appreciate your offer to use CCC material for my biography of Mr. Dorr. Your comments
about Mr. Parsons fuel additional interest in him despite his restrictions on your use
of
his comments about Dorr. Since your email on March 18th have you had an opportunity to
determine whether "he is still with us"? If he is and you would share his full name and
address with me, I'd like to write him a letter and see whether he will agree to be
interviewed by me--either on or off the record.
I will try and schedule a visit to the MFC in the weeks ahead. I am very interested in
MF043, 062, 086, 113, 119, and of course 120. Could you have someone on your staff
determine whether there is a finding aid for MF 086 (Richard Hale Collection). If so,
could it be surveyed for any indications of discussions about Mr. Dorr or the Park?
Looking forward to meeting you!
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
Director of Shapiro Library
Southern New Hampshire University
Manchester, NH 03106
603-668-2211, ext. 2164
603-645-9685 fax
--Original Message
From: James Moreira [mailto:James Moreira@umit.maine.edu
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 11:41 AM
To: Epp, Ronald
Subject: Re: MFC, ANP & George Dorr
Dear Mr. Epp;
My apologies for taking so long to get back to you. I have had several pressing deadlines
in the last month and am just now getting caught up.
By all means, you are welcome to use whatever material we have compiled for the CCC
project, though relatively little of what we uncovered relates specifically to Dorr.
The
CCC men with whom we spoke had very little contact with the higher-ups in the Park
administration. The individual you mention worked as an assistant to Dorr in an informal
capacity, and from what I recall, spent most of his time filing papers. When I
interviewed Mr. Parsons, he was uneasy about discussing his relationship with Dorr, though
I don't know why, and he called me up after the inview and asked that his comments about
Dorr be restricted. Parson's was very forthcoming on other aspects of his time in the CCC
and in fact was immensely helpful. To be honest, I haven't seen him in some time, and he
was 93 when I interviewed him, so I'll have to check to see whether he is still with us.
As for the project database, it is not complete but is usable. When I was compiling the
report, I found the actual Park correspondence more useful. We have copies of the reports
here at the Folklife Center.
Please feel free to get in touch or visit at any time.
1
All the best
Jamie Moreira
"Epp, Ronald" kr.epp@snhu.edu> writes:
>Dear Professor Moreira:
>
>For the past four years I have been intensely involved in an
>archival-based biography of George B. Dorr. Curator Brooke Childrey at
>the Sawtelle Archives at ANP has been very supportive. During my
>December visit she permitted me to copy portions of your interium report for an oral
history of the CCC at ANP. I am currently examining it in detail and making comparisons
with related CCC manuscript material I have examined at the National Archives (College
Park) , the NPS Historical Collections (Harpers Ferry W VA), the Rockefeller Archive
Center, and the Dorr Papers at the Jesup Memorial Library.
>
>It may be useful for us to meet and discuss our overlapping interests
>more fully. For example, is the database project of all works projects
>approved the the WPA for Acadia completed? If so, is it accessible to researchers? On
another front, you mention an interview candidate who worked closely with George Dorr but
has been reisting your overtures. Any recent success? If you provide contact information,
would you mind if I approached him?
>
>I've taped quite a few interviews since last spring which have not yet
>been transcribed and which may prove of interest to you.
>
>If I whetted your appetite, please contact me. I journey to MDI often and could easily
arrange a detour to the MFC when I next visit in mid-March.
>
>
>
>Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
>Director of Shapiro Library
>Southern New Hampshire University
>Manchester, NH 03106
>
>
>
>603-668-2211, ext. 2164
>603=645-9685 fax
when
2