State Parks and Rec gives thanks for massive CCC photo-scanning project
The Washington State Archives’ Digital Projects Archivists Maggie Cogswell and Mary Hammer led the way in completing a massive, 11-year project digitizing and cataloging photos of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) from the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission.
This collection of 2,396 photographs shows work conducted on Washington state parks by the CCC from 1933 to 1938, and includes images of Moran, Lewis and Clark, Deception Pass, Millersylvania, Riverside, Rainbow Falls, Carkeek, Denny Park, Mt. Spokane, Saltwater, Beacon Rock, Gingko, and Twanoh State Parks.
The CCC was a public work-relief program for unemployed men that focused on natural resource conservation from 1933 to 1942. As part of New Deal legislation proposed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the CCC was designed to provide work for young men during the Great Depression, as well as provide a natural-resource conservation program on federal and state lands. Members would enlist for a duration of six months, live in camps, wear uniforms, and abide by strict standards and discipline. About 3 million CCC men worked on public lands across the nation. Many of Washington’s state parks were built entirely by CCC men, creating one of America's finest park systems.
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