A salute from one CCC to another
Before
they became known as Tom Brokaw’s Greatest Generation, many of the young men
who served in World War II were part of the Civilian Conservation Corps. They
were the “CCC boys” who planted trees, built parks and trails, and fought fires
and floods.
The
Civilian Conservation Corps was created 75 years ago, signed into law by
President Franklin Roosevelt on March 31, 1933. It was just a few weeks after
his March inauguration, in the midst of the Depression. The CCC offered jobs,
room and board and a salary of $30 a month, with $25 sent home to impoverished
families.
Young
men began signing up immediately. There were three million of them over the
life of the program, and they left us quite a legacy. But when the program
ended in 1942, the nation was at war with no time for monuments or accolades.
The
Civilian Conservation Corps’ achievements are vast. With camps in every one of
the 48 states, the CCC built most of the state parks across the nation,
including more than 20 parks in California. If you’ve hiked on Mt. Diablo or
camped at Pfeiffer Big Sur you’ve seen the CCC’s handiwork. If you’ve heated a
pot of coffee at your campsite, it was likely on one of thousands of stone stoves
the CCC built. Crews also worked in the national parks, such as Yosemite. They
constructed trails and massive granite steps — work that I, as a backcountry
trails supervisor, admired first-hand 50 years later.
There
were 30,000 young men working in California CCC camps in 1934. That same year,
an 18-year-old named Robert Griffiths was living in Utica, New York. “Things
were tough. We were hungry, in bad shape,” he said. “My father read about the
CCC and went down to city hall to see if I were eligible. I was and joined
about a week later.” He stayed for three years.
Today,
Griffiths is 91 years old and lives near Sacramento. He doesn’t quite look like
a “CCC boy” anymore, but the impact of the program has never left him.
More
than 30 years ago, he co-founded the CCC national alumni association and helped
get California’s Conservation Corps State Museum off the ground in the 1980s.
He planted a tree in Capitol Park with Gov. Deukmejian for the CCC’s 50th
anniversary. And he recently spoke about the 1930s CCC to Sacramento high
school students.
Griffiths
wouldn’t have much difficulty recognizing today’s California Conservation
Corps. There are women now, yes, but from the acronym on down, the programs and
core values are much alike. Our corpsmembers tackle a
portfolio of natural resource work throughout the state that includes energy
conservation and today’s other environmental priorities.
The
original CCC set an example — and a high bar — for the programs it spawned.
Today’s California program was established by Gov. Jerry Brown in 1976, the
first corps since FDR’s time. More than 100 regional and state corps have followed, then the national AmeriCorps program in 1993.
Just last month, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver announced
the creation of the first cabinet-level position in the country for service and
volunteering. All of these efforts have a direct line of ancestry back to the
Civilian Conservation Corps.
As
head of our modern-day CCC, my dream is to ultimately leave a legacy of both
projects and outstanding citizens as did our predecessors. We salute the men of
the Civilian Conservation Corps and know we have some very big boots to fill.
David
Muraki is director of the California Conservation
Corps.