Civilian Conservation Corp Camp at Harold Parker State Forest: Difference between revisions
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Four-term Boston Mayor and one-term MA governor, James Michael Curley visited the camps with his daughter Mary in February 1935. <ref> [https://archive.org/details/JamesMichaelCurleyScrapbook-v127/page/n55/mode/2up?q=%22harold+parker%22 Governor visits camp in Andover, ''Lawrence Evening Sun'', February 17, 1935.] </ref> | Four-term Boston Mayor and one-term MA governor, James Michael Curley visited the camps with his daughter Mary in February 1935. <ref> [https://archive.org/details/JamesMichaelCurleyScrapbook-v127/page/n55/mode/2up?q=%22harold+parker%22 Governor visits camp in Andover, ''Lawrence Evening Sun'', February 17, 1935.] </ref> | ||
Digitized copies of [https://dds.crl.edu/crldelivery/10461 The Harold Parker Review], a type-written and hand-illustrated CCC camp newssletter are available from the Center for Research Libraries digital collections. | The Harold Parker Review was a type-written and hand-illustrated camp newsletter begun in 1934. <ref> Paper published by C.C.C. boys, ''The Andover Townsman'', August 3, 1934. </ref>Digitized copies of [https://dds.crl.edu/crldelivery/10461 The Harold Parker Review], a type-written and hand-illustrated CCC camp newssletter are available from the Center for Research Libraries digital collections. | ||
REFERENCES | REFERENCES |
Revision as of 12:41, 20 March 2024
In the 1930s, two Civilian Conservation Corps Camps were established in Harold Parker State Forest, Camp S-5 (Company 110) and Camp S-76 (Company 167). The camps work included reforestation work, damming ponds, road and trail creation, building recreational facilities. Camp S-76 also provided assistance to local communities during emergencies. [1] [2] Creating stocked ponds, available to the public, was a major goal of Harold Parker camp leadership, [3] Hundreds of men, many of them local worked in and led the camps' work. [4]
The Town of Andover invited CCC camp crews to take classes at Punchard High School, to borrow library books and to generally be a part of town life. There is some evidence that camp crew used their time to become qualified for permanent employment. [5]
Four-term Boston Mayor and one-term MA governor, James Michael Curley visited the camps with his daughter Mary in February 1935. [6]
The Harold Parker Review was a type-written and hand-illustrated camp newsletter begun in 1934. [7]Digitized copies of The Harold Parker Review, a type-written and hand-illustrated CCC camp newssletter are available from the Center for Research Libraries digital collections.
REFERENCES
- ↑ https://archive.org/details/civilianconserva00berg/mode/2up?q=harold+parker Civilian Conservation Corps : shaping the forests and parks of Massachusetts : a statewide survey of Civilian Conservation Corps resources]
- ↑ Annual Report of the Commissioner of Conservation and State Forester (1920-1938)
- ↑ Ponds in Parker forest for fish raising,The Andover Townsman, June 30, 1933.
- ↑ State forest to be recreational park, The Andover Townsman, June 1, 1934
- ↑ CCC member becomes state police officer, The Andover Townsman, January 8, 1937.
- ↑ Governor visits camp in Andover, Lawrence Evening Sun, February 17, 1935.
- ↑ Paper published by C.C.C. boys, The Andover Townsman, August 3, 1934.