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How FDR’s Tree Army Built America

Episode 5396 Published 3 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
In 1933, Franklin Roosevelt launched one of the most ambitious conservation and employment programs in American history: the Civilian Conservation Corps. Known affectionately as Roosevelt's Tree Army, the CCC put roughly three million young men to work planting trees, building trails, fighting fires, and constructing the infrastructure that still defines America's public lands today. It was born from desperation but became one of the most beloved and enduring legacies of the New Deal era. The program emerged from the collision of two crises. The Great Depression had left a quarter of the American workforce unemployed, with young men particularly hard hit and increasingly desperate. Simultaneously, decades of reckless logging, overgrazing, and poor land management had left vast stretches of the American landscape eroded, deforested, and ecologically devastated. Roosevelt saw an elegant solution in connecting these two problems, putting idle hands to work healing damaged land. The CCC operated with military-style organization. The Army managed the camps, the Department of Labor recruited the enrollees, and the Departments of Agriculture and Interior directed the actual conservation work. Young men between seventeen and twenty-eight, mostly from impoverished families, received thirty dollars a month, of which twenty-five dollars was sent directly home to their families. For millions of households teetering on the edge of survival, that monthly check was the difference between eating and starving. The physical accomplishments were staggering. CCC workers planted over three billion trees, built more than eight hundred parks, constructed countless bridges, fire towers, and trails, and fought forest fires across the country. Much of the infrastructure that visitors enjoy in national and state parks today was built by CCC hands during the 1930s. The program also served as an informal school, offering literacy classes and vocational training to young men who had been forced to abandon their education. This episode tells the story of how a depression-era jobs program became one of America's greatest conservation achievements, transforming both the landscape and the lives of the young men who rebuilt it with shovels, axes, and sheer determination.
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