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The Birth of the Civilian Conservation Corps From "Forest Army" by Michael I. Smith |

March 31, 2008 will mark the 75th anniversary of the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps. Today, in an era when individual government agencies seem to have difficulty conducting the people's business, it should astound us to know that the CCC brought together the efforts of multiple federal agencies for a nearly decade-long effort that successfully employed and trained some 3 million young men as our nation stood on the cusp of war. Perhaps more amazing is the fact that, while the embryonic notions of melding work relief and conservation were in Franklin Roosevelt's mind well before he was elected president, the legislation to create the CCC passed through Congress in just 18 days.
Here then is a timeline of significant events connected to the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps. Much of this information is from John Salmond's incredible book on the Civilian Conservation Corps.
1910
Franklin Delano Roosevelt takes over the family estate at
1931
Roosevelt sponsors an amendment to the
1932
July 2
In accepting the Democratic presidential nomination,
1933
January
James Couzens, a Republican senator from
March 9
Meeting with advisors, including the Secretaries of the interior,
agriculture, and war FDR diagrams his plan to put 500,000 men to work on
conservation-related projects. He asks Colonel Kyle Rucker, Army judge
advocate-general, and Edward Finney, the solicitor of the Department of the
Interior to prepare draft legislation, requesting they complete the task by
days end.
March 14
March 15
At the request of President Roosevelt, the secretaries
of war, interior, agriculture and labor meet to discuss the creation of a “civilian
conservation corps.” In this initial meeting, the secretaries considered a
number of aspects of the proposed conservation work program, including their
recommendation that the work be strictly limited, ideally to forestry and soil
erosion projects and not toward public works projects, so as not to compete
with employers in the open market.
At his third press conference, held the same day his “informal
committee” meets,
March 21
More specifically, Roosevelt uttered what may be the most
often quoted phrase in connection with the Civilian Conservation Corps:
"I propose to create a Civilian Conservation Corps to be used in
simple work, not interfering with normal employment and confining itself to
forestry, the prevention of soil erosion, flood control and similar projects. I
estimate that 250,000 men can be given temporary employment by early summer if
you give me authority to proceed within two weeks."
"More important will be the moral and spiritual value of such work.
The overwhelming majority of unemployed Americans who are walking the streets
and receiving private or public relief would infinitely prefer to work. We can
take a vast army of these unemployed out into healthful surroundings."
Following the President’s message at bill entitled “The Relief of Unemployment Through the Performance of Useful Public Work and for other
Purposes” was introduced into both the Senate and the House.
Labor leaders quickly condemn the plan for its wage and recruitment provisions
and because of the involvement of the Army.
March 22
March 23-24
Joint Senate and House hearings begin in an atmosphere of cooperation
possibly due to
Among those testifying at the Joint hearing is Chief forester Major Stuart who
testified at length regarding the need for forest workers. Stuart also makes a
successful bid to broaden the program’s scope of work to include not just
national forests but also state and private forests. Without such a change,
Stuart argues, there will have to be a transfer of men from east of the
Mississippi River to the
Stuart is also quizzed on the issue of paying enrollees $1 a day when the
regular wage for forestry workers runs in the neighborhood of $3 a day. Stuart
stresses the program’s function as a relief measure and explains that skilled
$3 a day workers could serve as supervisor’s and
foremen, with a clear distinction between the two wage scales.
Secretary of Labor, Miss Frances Perkins also stresses the programs aim of work
relief when questioned about the proposed $1 a day wage for enrollees. She
explains that most of the workers are expected to be young, single men and that
the CCC should not be viewed “in the sense of providing real wage-producing
employment.”
Army chief of staff, General Douglas MacArthur testifies
that there will be “no military training whatsoever,” with the military
restricting its participation to gathering the men selected by the Department
of Labor, outfitting the men, giving the men a physical examination and
physical conditioning before transporting them to their camps where they would
be turned over to the Department of Agriculture.
The next witness is William Green, president of the American Federation of
Labor. Green attacks the program on three points: regimentation of labor, low
wages and funding. To Green the mandatory allotment and the involvement of the
military “smacked of fascism, Hitlerism, of a form of Sovietism…”
Green argues that the CCC wage of $1 a day would establish that as the national
wage for workers. Other labor representatives also testify and the hearing
adjourns on a far less optimistic note than it convened.
March 27
An amended S. 598 is reintroduced into the Senate. In
response to the objections raised by labor, it was agreed that the focus should
be on the two aspects of the program for which there were no objections from
any side: the chance to perform forestry work as a means of relieving
unemployment and the use of unobligated funds to pay for the program. The
re-submitted bill merely authorized the President to work in the public domain,
perform reforestation and employ unemployed citizens to perform the work.
In the House opposition to the bill is more robust and broad based. Despite
indications from labor leaders that the $30 monthly wage would not be
contested, an effort was launched to set the pay scale at $50 a month for
single enrollees and $80 a month for married enrollees.
March 28
The senate bill is passed by voice vote over
dwindling opposition, with minor amendments and in part because of the
continuing efforts of Senator Walsh.
March 29
The House considers the bill amended and passed by the Senate on March
28th. Representative Connery stood to protest the proposed wage and
dramatically announced that once again, labor leaders had again changed their
position and now opposed the bill. Still another faction stood to argue that
the measure imparted nearly dictatorial powers on the president and would lead
a majority of the population believing that “it is the Government’s duty to put
them on the pay roll.”
Nevertheless, the intent of the bill receives wide support in the House, with
many recognizing it as focusing on relief of unemployment, not wage control.
Representative Thomas G. Cochran of
Like Senator Walsh in the senate, Representative Robert Ramspeck,
a Democrat from
Connery’s proposal to set the monthly wage at $50
fails, along with a last minute effort by Republicans to delay proceedings.
Only three amendments are adopted, including that proposed by Representative
Oscar De Priest, a Republican from
The bill is passed by a voice vote.
March 30
The Senate accepts the House amendments to the bill and it is
forwarded to the President.
March 31
President Roosevelt signs into law, the legislation creating
the Emergency Conservation Work (ECW) program and the Civilian Conservation
Corps is born.
April 17
The first CCC camp is established in the
In an article titled “Rizzo Goes To Work,” Time
magazine reports that a week earlier, 19 year old Fiore Rizzo reported to the