CCC Camps of the Mackay area
December 10, 1998; Article in Arco Advertiser
If you were around the area during the
1930's you may have noted in influx of a few regular U.S. Army members
as well as a larger number of young men in a different military style uniform.
These were the CCC boys . While the whole country was suffering the effects
of the "Great Depression", the Mackay area too felt its impact. Slumping
metal prices saw a slow down in mining operations on the "Hill", and jobs
were hard to find. Under President Roosevelt's "New Deal" program to put
the country back to work, a number of programs were instituted, one of
which --the Civilian Conservation Corps, or CCC--would have a dramatic
infuluence in the West, Idaho, Custer County and the Mackay area. The CCC,
instituted in April 1933 and administered by the then Department
of War, enlisted young (17-23) unmarried and unemployed men to train and
give them work in conservation of the nation's soil, timber, and water
resources. They were required to sign on for a minimum of (6) months with
pay at $ 30 a month, plus army style room, board, and medical benefits.
Camps were set up all across the country but
the majority were located in the West, all run by the U.S. Army. Idaho
had numerous camps and many within the central mountain and Salmon River
country including camps at Challis, Bonanza, Clayton, Shoup, Salmon and
Riggins. Three others, closer to home, had a more direct influence
on the Mackay area; camps at Wildhorse creek, Pass Creek, and at a Double
Springs above Dickey.
The first of these to be set
up was the camp Wildhorse. According to the Mackay Miner of May
25, 1933, a train arrived in Mackay carrying 78 regular Army
troops charged with setting up camps at Challis, Bonanza, and at Wildhorse
Creek. Some 40 young men from the Mackay area had already sighned up with
another 25 nedded as a nucleus to man these camps and to get the work started
as directed by the local Foresst Service supervisor. By June more
CCC recruits had arrived from back East, the camp at Wildhorse was up and
running, and new Forest Service trucks were carrying men out to the camp.
According to Clint Whitney, present Mackay resident and one of the origianal
group of men from Mackay to sign up, the camp was located very near the
junction of the Copper Basin/ Widlhorse Canyon roads and consisted of tents
and wood frame buildings which housed the mess hall and some living quarters.
Life in camp was regimented, much like regular army life with inspections
regular etc., but week-ends were their own and most of the boys adapted
well. Nearly 100 men, including trail blazing , road construction and bridge
building, campground construction, fire fighting and prevention, erection
of telphone poles and lines and the construction of the Forest Service
guard station on Wildhorse Creek. Establishment of the guard station and
facilities at Wildhorse were significant in that they would become the
offical summer headquarters of the Forest Service for the entire area.
Although this CCC camp was short lived, much was accompished before
it was officially disbanded and moved to Rigginson the Salmon River in
October of 1933.
The second local CCC camp, PASS CREEK,
got its start with the arrival of a contingent of U.S. Army Troops
in June of 1935, with orders to set up a camp near the upper entrance to
the Pass Creek gorge. According to information in issuess of the Mackay
Miner in the summer of 1935, construction went at a rapid pace with frequent
rail cars of lumber and materials to ready the camp for the arrival of
CCC recruits. The first to arrive was a group of 95 young men
mostly from Ohio and Kentucky, off loaded from the train at Leslie,
with more men expected before winter. Amoung this initial group was Oval
Caskey, present resident of Mackay's Mayor.
The camp at Pass Creek was a formidable one;
one of the most complete in facilities for training and education
in this area of Idaho. During its peak it had nearly 200 men employed and
in training. Facilities included permanet buildings for barracks, mess
hall, training shops , and even a theather and rec hall for their recreation
needs. Educaational programs included wood working , welding, motor repair
and vehicle maintenance, heavy equitment operation, telephone technology,
drainage engineering as well as academic study. The mission of this camp,
like most located within the National Forests, was geared toward improving
access to and conservation of its natural resources. This included dozing
and grading of many miles, of road, construction of bridges and camp
grounds, erection of telephone lines, and thousands of hours devoted to
fire fighting and
prevention. Most of today's good roads system up and over the Pass
Creek provided outreach of "spike" camps at a
number of sots in the area. Crews from one "spike" camp, located on
the uppere river, were instrumental in finishing of the Trail Creek road
to Sun Valley. The CCC boys responded where ever and when ever a force
of men and equipment were needed dfor Forest Service projects, especially
firfighting. The camp at Pass Creek continued though the critical years
of the depression and did not diband until June of 1941, one of the last
camps to close in Idaho.
As reported in the Mackay Miner, the lasst
of the local CCC camps, Double Springs Camp, was set up in June of 1938
about 3 miles above Dickey. This camp included two companies of CCC
boys (about 200-250) and included those from a
recently dibanded camp at Clayton as well as soem newq recruits that
arrived in October of that year. Their mission, directed by what we call
the BLM today, primarily consisted of the conservation and inprovement
of the grazing land within the watering areas for livestock , all
which improved productiveness of the range. It is believed thes camp disbanded
sometime in 1940.
It is hard to estimate the full impact thata
these CCC camps had on the economy abd prosperity of this reagion during
the difficult "Depression" years. Each CCC boy was paid $30.00 a month;
to as much as $130.00/ mo. if in a supervisory position. Their regular
Army superiors probably even more. Some of this payroll was spent locally,
but more i,portantly, the campx meant local young men had employment and
were able to stay in the area, keeping families together and preserving
their homes and title totheir land. Indirectly their efforts benefitted
the mining industry, tourist trade, and ranching and agriculture which
was good for the entire valley. Many young men learned valueable trades
and skills which allowed them to find better jobs and contribute to the
community. Clint Whitney of Mackay went to work for the Forest Service
for many years as an aide to the area Forest Ranger after his stint in
the CCC; Oval Caskey used his learned CCC road building and other skills
for 30 years as a maintenance foreman with the State Highway Department.
During this period the CCC boys became a normal part of the scene in Mackay
and other valley communities, esdpecially on the week-ends. They attended
dances, movies, and local events, and the camps always boasted good baseball
and athletic competition for teams of Mackay and other valley communities.
Many of the young men found wives here in thearea which led to families
and settling here for good. By act of the Federal Goverment in 1942, the
Civilian Conservation Corps program was terminated, but evidence
of their presence and hard work wil ikdley be with us for many years to
come. The next time your traveling the National Forests on trail
or off-road, or using one of the areas many campgrounds, remember that
it was probably developed by thoswe CCC boys.