Albuquerque Journal

One shovel at a time

Civilian Climate Corps is a CCC for the 21st century

- BY MORGAN GREENE

CHICAGO — They built limestone aqueducts in the Dan Ryan Woods and dug out the Skokie Lagoons one shovel at a time. At Starved Rock State Park, they raised lodges, and along the I&M Canal, they extended dozens of bridges. They carved out trails and cleared campground­s and planted billions of trees, and they did all of this as part of their time in the Civilian Conservati­on Corps, a widely popular New Deal program now being re-imagined for the 21st century.

In President Joe Biden’s January executive order aimed at addressing the climate crisis, there was a call for the creation of a Civilian Climate Corps. The modern CCC would employ Americans “to conserve and restore public lands and waters, bolster community resilience, increase reforestat­ion, increase carbon sequestrat­ion in the agricultur­al sector, protect biodiversi­ty, improve access to recreation and address the changing climate.”

The $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan introduced at the end of March included $10 billion for a corps. Multiple CCC-esque bills have also been introduced in Congress, including the Renew Conservati­on Corps Act by U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, with a parallel bill from U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, both Illinois Democrats.

“I think Illinois is in a very special position here to help launch a program that could have a huge impact on people’s lives and on our infrastruc­ture,” said Jerry Adelmann, president and CEO of the conservati­on nonprofit Openlands, which helped shape the Renew act. “We’re trying to build a big tent and get everybody under it.”

Illinois conservati­onists are working to create a program that they hope will find bipartisan support, like the original. For the Great Lakes region, a new corps could mean checking off a long list of items on advocates’ lists: more green space and infrastruc­ture in cities, muchneeded assistance to eroding shorelines, habitat restoratio­n, reforestat­ion of dwindling canopies — and new jobs. And, advocates say, the timing seems right. “A convergenc­e, really, of intersecti­ng challenges,” Adelmann said. “Climate, being one, racial justice being another, and then the economy, unemployme­nt. These three things are coming together in powerful ways. Don’t they suggest that there should be a program?”

‘900 trees in a week’

Created in 1933 under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Civilian Conservati­on Corps employed more than 3 million mostly young white men, offering a holistic education in conservati­on and requiring most of the earnings, usually about $30 a month, to be sent home to their families.

When some CCC alumni returned to an old corps site in 2000 to build a park, Ted Golema, then 82, of Lyons, recalled his earlier work as repetitiou­s, but he was glad to have a job. “I must’ve planted 900 trees in a week,” he said. “But the most important thing was we got three meals a day and a paycheck. That was a godsend to the family.”

Participan­ts lived at corps camps, where they received meals and medical care, and when they weren’t working, many attended classes together.

According to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, at Camp Danville in Vermilion County’s Kickapoo State Park, workers could study topics including auto mechanics, agricultur­e, tree surgery, beekeeping, hospital administra­tion and radio broadcasti­ng.

“Roosevelt’s Tree Army” arrived at a time of staggering unemployme­nt, but also struggling natural areas — stressed forests, eroding land, monuments in disrepair.

Today the results of their work can be seen in parks and preserves across the country.

One camp worked as far away as Mount McKinley National Park, now Denali, in Alaska. Backbone State Park, near Dundee, Iowa, was home to corps work — and has a CCC museum. New Salem, a pioneer settlement in Illinois where Abraham Lincoln once lived, was recreated by the corps about a century later.

“The legacy of the CCC here and across the country in parks and preserves and national parks is just unbelievab­le and extensive and beautiful,” said Benjamin Cox, executive director of Friends of the Forest Preserves. “It’s just a national treasure.”

Oscar Stanton De Priest, Chicago’s first Black alderman and later an Illinois representa­tive, added an amendment to CCC legislatio­n banning discrimina­tion, but camps were usually segregated.

Decades later, archivists are still in search of rare photos and stories representi­ng camps that employed Native Americans and Black Americans. An image from a Michigan camp, identified in 2018, marked a small step toward recognitio­n of the overlooked CCC experience. A photo labeled “Big Jim” was found to be of James Richardson, reportedly “a quiet, strong, hardworkin­g rural Michigan farmer who served in World War I and went on to join the CCC.”

Shaping lives

“People remembered it, their lives were shaped by it, in some cases it introduced people to new careers,” Adelmann said.

Illinois housed about 50 corps camps, according to the state’s Department of Natural Resources, with larger ones hosting as many as 200 workers. Sixty million trees were planted in the state, more than 1,000 miles of trails were created, nearly 5,000 flood control structures were added and total acreage of state parks and monuments rose from 2,800 in 1930 to 16,500 a decade later.

The largest concentrat­ion of camps in the country was in the Skokie Valley, where workers excavated a few million cubic yards of soil and created about 200 acres of lagoons.

Newspapers from the camps, some more serious than others and collected as part of an archive from the Center for Research Libraries, depict days marked by hard work, but never too busy for a joke. Camp updates often made the front page, with significan­t column space devoted to sports and pages filled with everything from fun facts about the natural world to thinly veiled gossip.

An item in the 1934 edition of a paper from the ChicagoLem­ont site announced “Officers are getting ritzy” with quarters resembling “the lobby of the Grand Hotel — well, maybe the Drake — Oh well, then, your own

living room,” according to archives from the Center for Research Libraries. A column in a paper from a Mount Carroll camp, one of the few in Illinois where mostly Black workers were employed, broke down the process of soil erosion.

The Fort Farce out of Sheridan ran an obituary for its company mascot, a pet rabbit named Ida Minnie, whose services were held at her owner’s tent, according to archives from the Center for Research Libraries. Her last words: “Ida lived if I could have.”

The Civilian Conservati­on Corps disbanded by 1942; some participan­ts went on to serve in World War II and others moved on to new careers. Versions of corps programs continued in some locations, and others were created, like the Youth Conservati­on Corps.

In later years, some of those paths appeared in Chicago Tribune obituaries: a constructi­on worker at Glacier and Grand Teton national parks who grew up in coal mining country and went on to work as a carpenter at the Art Institute; a Bucktown native who joined the CCC and was later known as an esteemed pinball designer.

Floyd Fritz, of Geneva, joined the corps at Silver Falls State Park in Oregon, preserving natural sites and clearing paths. After lightning ignited a forest fire, he and some fellow workers were lost for days; authoritie­s reported them dead. Fritz made it out.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO ?? The scene at Willow Road and Skokie Boulevard, just west of Winnetka, Ill., as members of the Civilian Conservati­on Corps construct the Skokie Lagoons, one of five lagoons to be built in that area, in 1933.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO The scene at Willow Road and Skokie Boulevard, just west of Winnetka, Ill., as members of the Civilian Conservati­on Corps construct the Skokie Lagoons, one of five lagoons to be built in that area, in 1933.
 ?? WILLIAM DESHAZER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? An aerial view of the Skokie Lagoons, which were built by the Civilian Conservati­on Corps, part of the New Deal.
WILLIAM DESHAZER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE An aerial view of the Skokie Lagoons, which were built by the Civilian Conservati­on Corps, part of the New Deal.
 ?? E. JASON WAMBSGANS/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Families visit Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site near Petersburg, Ill., in August 2011.
E. JASON WAMBSGANS/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE Families visit Lincoln’s New Salem State Historic Site near Petersburg, Ill., in August 2011.
 ?? Ill. ERIN HOOLEY/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Birders keep watch at Skokie Lagoons in April in Glencoe,
Ill. ERIN HOOLEY/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE Birders keep watch at Skokie Lagoons in April in Glencoe,

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