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I join the Civilian Conservation Corps and go to Valley Creek State Park Camp, near Selma, Ala.

To provide work for myself and income for the family, I joined the Civilian Conservation Corps (C.C.C.), the members of which wore old surplus U.S. army uniforms without insignia and lived in camps often located in State or Federal parks. The primary objective of the C.C.C. was to provide work for young unmarried men and income for their needy families. The enrollees received $5.00 per month, and $25.00 per month went to their family. However, the work done by the C.C.C. also turned out to be of much immediate and lasting benefit to the public. The C.C.C. improved public parks, or lands, by planting trees, and building paths, roads, lakes, cabins, other buildings, etc. Needy veterans of WW-I in good health were also eligible to join, and were usually assigned to special veteran’s camps. There were also some Local Experienced Men, called LEMs, who could be married, and who, because of their skills, served as heads of work groups. They were paid somewhat more than the junior enrollee. Enrollees could stay a maximum of two years in the C.C.C.

I really had no idea of what I was getting into, but realized that, at least for a while my electrical experimentation had come to an end. Sadly, I took down the telephone line to Bill’s house, and carefully packed all of my precious experimental things in a wooden box and nailed it shut. My mother assured me that she would keep my box of “stuff” safe until my return. Sadly, I sensed that whatever the future brought, my boyhood period had come to and end.

C.C.C. enrollees were required to be 17 years old, but when I enrolled in Montgomery, Ala., early on a Thursday morning, January 7, 1937, they overlooked the fact that I lacked 4 days of being 17 years old. About 40 men came for induction, and after recording our individual data, we were told to undress, and to line up nude for a medical inspection. Initially, each man stepped on a scale, and his weight and height were noted. A doctor, accompanied by a man who recorded information, walked down the line, spending a very short time with each man. Each man was checked for vision, hearing, the condition of his teeth, etc. He was made to jump up and down, squat, touch his toes, and then stand still while his heart and lungs were checked with a stethoscope. All of the men were accepted, including one man who fainted when the doctor touched the man’s chest with his stethoscope. Literacy was not a requirement.

The testing having been completed, we were divided into several groups, each of which would be taken to a different C.C.C. camp. Typical Army type trucks with canvas covers were waiting outside, and my group of about 14 men was directed to board a certain truck. I was obviously considerably younger than the others.

Shortly before lunch, we arrived at C.C.C. camp 444 at Valley Creek State Park about 16 miles north of Selma, Alabama. We were directed to one of the four barracks, where we were assigned beds. We were then given a WW-I aluminum cup, which had a peculiar shape and a folding handle, and a WW-I mess kit that was oval in shape and had a lid that served as a plate. The folding mess kit handle closed over the lid and latched. The knife, fork, and spoon were stored inside the mess kit. Most, if not all of us, were seeing these military things for the first time.

We were shown the location of the latrine, which was in a building with a long seat in the center of the room. There were two rows of holes of the appropriate size to serve as toilets. It was mounted over a deep trench that had been dug into the ground, and even though some lime was sprinkled in the trench daily, the stench often drifted over the camp. I had no problem with that, as the outhouse we had at home was no better. We were also shown the bath house, that contained a row of showers against one wall, and on the opposite wall was a row of large pegs on which to hang clothing. This was far better than at home, as at home we had to walk to the well, draw water and haul it back, heat it on the wood burning stove, and bathe as best we could in a small galvanized tub. For shaving, pans of water could be filled from faucets and placed on a waist high shelf at each end of the room. Mirrors were mounted above the shelf. That, too, was far better than at home. We were told that to accommodate the large number of men wanting to use the facilities, everything had to be done rapidly.

After we had been made familiar with the camp, we were told to take our mess kits to the mess hall and line up with those already there. Since the main work sites were not far from camp, most of the men came back to camp for the noon meal. There were also a few men who worked in the camp. We learned that food was taken to one group of men who worked at a gravel pit a considerable distance away.

Someone warned us that anyone trying to break into the mess line was a candidate for being hit over the head with a mess kit. Although the food wasn’t very good, I found it edible and sufficient. There was no choice, and each man was served some of everything available. The food situation had not been very good at home, so I didn’t find it bad. After we had finished eating we went to a place behind the mess hall where there were two 55 gallon drums containing hot water heated by a wood fire. One of the drums contained soapy water, and the other contained clear water. Everyone scraped their mess kits into a garbage container and then swished them around in the drum containing the soapy water. Finally, they were rinsed in the drum containing clear water. We could sling them dry on the way back to the barracks.

Shortly afterward we were told to return to the mess-hall for a talk by the Commanding Officer, who was an Army Lieutenant, and by Mr. Sim Pace, a civilian who was the “Using Service” Supervisor in charge of the work being done by the men. The C. O. gave us a pleasant welcome followed by a recitation of the camp rules and a warning that camp rules would be strictly enforced. Breaking the rules could lead to an immediate discharge from the C.C.C. He said that there would be unannounced barracks inspections from time to time, and we were expected to keep our barracks neat and clean and the beds made properly. Although there would be no military training, we could expect that on some weekends we would be turned out for a roll call and for group exercise. Mr. Pace told us that the work being done was to improve the State Park by building a lake, roads, some buildings, and by planting trees.

Following the talks, we visited the supply room and were issued our meager supply of clothing, etc. The man in charge of the supplies was called the “supply sergeant”, and the man in charge of the mess was called the “mess sergeant, but they were C.C.C. men. We were told to be with the rest of the men at a certain place in camp a few minutes after breakfast, when we would be told which work group we would join. When the men returned tired and dirty from work, and after they had taken a shower, they gave us friendly welcomes, and showed us how to make our beds.

After dark, a group of rather tough looking C.C.C. men with flashlights entered our barracks, and the leader announced that it was time for the newcomers to be initiated. He directed us to form a line and to follow him into the woods. His men joined the line at intervals, and one brought up the rear. I have to admit that I didn’t feel very brave as we entered the woods and started down a seldom used path. The woods were very dark, and there was nobody close to me with a light. Not knowing what to expect, I took advantage of an opportunity to slip out of line unnoticed as the group pushed its way through some dense bushes that nearly covered the path. Their destination was within hearing distance of where I stood beside the path, and I heard a lot of shouting, cursing, and fiendish laughter before the men could be heard returning. I was really concerned that I might be discovered, but as they were threading their way past me through the dense dark bushes, I quickly stepped into the line. No one knew that I hadn’t participated in the initiation, and I wasn’t about to tell anybody. From their discussions afterward, I learned that nobody had been harmed, but some complained of rough and vulgar treatment. So ended my first day in the C.C.C.






A 1937 view of C.C.C. Camp 444, Valley Creek State Park, near Selma. - My barracks was the one in the center. The photo was taken from the camp’s water tower using my mother’s old Kodak box camera that she had sent me shortly after I arrived in camp.

The next morning I had the misfortune of being assigned to work with the group at the distant gravel pit. Six of us got into the back of a dump truck and traveled over very dusty, bumpy roads for nearly half an hour. The old truck put out a lot of smoke and fumes, that burned our eyes and made it hard to breathe. At the gravel pit, there was an ancient tractor with a blade on the front that pushed the gravel into piles, and our job was to throw the gravel into the truck with shovels. To reduce the height we had to throw the gravel, the road through the pit was kept somewhat lower than the surrounding gravel piles. However, it was still difficult to throw the gravel into the truck. We were allowed to take a breather from time to time. About the time we would finish loading a truck, another truck would appear. I felt sorry for those who had to do this work during the summer. The same food that they had in camp was brought to us, along with mess kits. After a week of that exhausting work, I joined a group that was spreading the gravel on a park road. Moving gravel around at ground level was much easier. Later, I was assigned to plant trees, which was fun compared to the other jobs.

The camp at Valley Creek State Park was probably typical of many C.C.C. camps. It was built among the trees. All of the buildings were of a temporary nature, because most of the camps would typically complete their work in several years and would be reestablished at another location. I understood that the building design was the same as the army used for temporary camp buildings. As I recall, the camp had a combined officer’s quarters and office building, four barracks that housed a total of about 200 men, a mess hall, a building with a recreation room and a few books, a small building housing the canteen, an office building for the camp’s work supervisor, a latrine, a bath house, and a building used by the motor pool. There was also a small sick bay, and a doctor would come to the camp from time to time . Once a military dentist, an army lieutenant, came to camp and brought an orderly with him. The orderly operated the foot powered device, like was used with an old sewing machine, that drove the dentist’s drills, etc. The dentist inspected every man’s teeth and put in fillings as required. I received my first filling. Months later, the filling fell out, and it was not replaced for several years. On another occasion, a doctor came to camp, formed the men in a line, and gave them “short arm” inspections.

In the recreation room, I spotted a closed door and peeked inside. There, to my surprise and delight, was a small darkroom with a sink, running water, darkroom light, trays, bottles, printing frames, etc., but no enlarger or photographic materials. I found out that it was there for our use, but nobody had ever used it. The user would have to supply only the chemicals and papers. I had never before seen a real darkroom. At home, I had used my mother’s old box camera to take photos which I developed and printed. Since we didn’t have electric lights, I had to use sunlight to expose the papers, which required that I work in the daytime. I had used a closet, and a flashlight with red tissue paper tied over the light, and used sparingly, served as a darkroom light. Chemicals and papers had been bought with money received from selling baby turtles. My trays had been bread pans borrowed from the kitchen. Developed film and papers were carried to the well where there was plenty of water available to wash them sufficiently to remove the hypo. Sometimes, I made and sold copies of photos to local people, mostly to the colored people.

After I discovered the darkroom, Mother sent me her old box camera. There was a Sears catalog in the recreation room, and I immediately ordered from Sears some photographic papers, several tubes of “MQ” developer at 5 cents per tube, and some fixer. The developer and fixer could be used with both film and paper. About two weeks later, I was set up to take photos of the men with the box camera, and I made prints for which I could charge 3 cents each. Since most of the photos were group photos, and I could sell prints to all of the men in the photo, I was able to sell almost as many as I had time to make. My profit was about 1 cent each. The money I made was used to order from Sears a Kodak box camera that was much better than Mother’s old camera, as it had a “portrait” lens, that permitted close-up photos.

CTC Men of Co. 444. -

These men are in their civilian clothing, and are standing at the nearby road on a weekend hoping to catch a ride into Selma for recreation. Most men seldom left camp due to lack of money. I made and sold a number of prints like this.

My lot in life suddenly changed for the better. In Letohatchie, I had a good friend, Frank

McEachern, who was somewhat younger than I was. He lived with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bragg Payne. His mother, Mrs. Sellers, lived in Montgomery, and she worked in a government office that had something to do with the C.C.C., and through a stroke of good luck, Mr. Pace, the Camp’s work supervisor, met her when he went there on business. Mrs. Sellers told him about my being at his camp, and said that I could type. That was stretching it a bit, as I had only taken typing for half a semester in the tenth grade. Upon his return, Mr. Pace assigned me to work in his office, and my days of hard manual labor suddenly came to an end. My office work greatly improved my typing skills, and I also did other office work that was a good learning experience for me.

Another benefit from working in Mr. Pace’s office was that he decided that it was appropriate to his position for him to have a driver. He taught me how to drive his car, and after that I drove him on his inspection tours of the various work sites. Since I lived in the barracks with the men who did hard, dirty, exhausting manual work all day, I fully expected some sarcastic comments from them as they would see me driving Mr. Pace, and trailing along with him to take down notes during his inspections. The notes were typed later. However, that didn’t happen, and I decided that most of the men, if not all, would have had no desire to swap jobs with me.

Driving Mr. Pace to the place where a dam for a lake was being built gave me a chance to see that work was done. There was no motor driven machinery, and the heavy work was done by a number of mules, each pulling a rather large scoop. Dirt would be scooped from the area where a large pond would be, and the scoop would be drug by the mules over the ground to the top of the dam being built. At the proper place, the operator would lift the handles of the scoop, and the front lip of the scoop would dig into the earth, causing the dirt to be dumped. The men would spread the dirt with shovels. I don’t remember ever learning where the mules and scoops were kept, but they were not kept near our camp. Perhaps they were supplied by a contractor.

The old Southern saying, “Them who have, git”, is very true. My assignment had an even greater benefit. Each camp in our C.C.C. District had a small radio telegraph station, which was equipped with old surplus army gear and was manned by a C.C.C. member. At our camp, the radio station was in a small room in the headquarters building. The radio was powered by a small generator in a small shed some distance away from the building.

Staying in camp provided an opportunity for me to become friends with the radio operator. I can’t recall his name, but I owe him a large debt of gratitude. He went out of his way to explain the radio operation to me and to help me learn the International Morse code, which is different from the American Morse code that I already knew. He held a Federal Radio Telegraph License, and when he was offered a job as radio operator aboard a ship, he sold me for $2.50 his collection of tools, radio parts, etc. He said that he hated to part with those valuable things, which he had been collecting for some time, but simply had no place he could leave them while he was at sea. His loss was my gain. Included were a pair of old earphones, and a buzzer for building a code practice set, which immediately came in handy. It also included long nose pliers, wire cutting pliers, some screw drivers, drill bits, soldering iron, and other tools, and a collection of nuts, screws, bolts, washers, and other useful hardware. I simply had to have that wonderful stuff to add to what I already had in the wooden box at home. My mother loaned me the money until payday, when I would receive $5.00. I was delighted! Having no place to keep such things at camp, I sent most of it home. Those things would come in very handy later.

By far, the most important thing that the radio operator had done for me was to submit my name to the C. O. as a candidate for attending the District Radio School at Ft. Barrancas, Fla. Mr. Pace had a good bit of time and effort invested in me, but kindly told me that he would release me if I received that opportunity.

To my great surprise, I received a letter from Mother telling me that on May 7, 1937, she had married Melvin Sanderson, one of the telegraph operators at the L&N depot. Melvin was a fine man, and had been one of the operators who had helped me learn the American Morse code. The Sandersons were among the first people to settle in the Letohatchie area in the early 1800s. Melvin wanted mother to close the small filling station and store, which was hardly breaking even, so she could devote herself to making a home for the family. They moved out of the shack in which we had lived for several years, and moved into rooms in a fine old two-story home belonging to Mrs. Carey Powell, an elderly lady, who wanted to share the kitchen and the cooking duties. Mother said that the rent was $15.00 per month. For the first time since moving to Letohatchie, the family would have electricity, and there was a refrigerator in the kitchen. My small amount of clothing, .22 rifle, telephone equipment, crystal set radio, my original box of electrical materials, and my newly acquired tools and radio stuff were being stored in a safe place. Melvin had told Mother that he wanted me to return home at the appropriate time and finish high school. After years of a miserable existence, Mother’s marriage to Melvin was a turning point in the life of our family.

The Radio Telegraph School at Ft. Barrancas, Florida

Our Commanding Officer received a request for a candidate for the radio school, and he submitted my name. A few days later, about the first of June, 1937, I was sent by a slow train on an L&N line that ran due south from Selma to Pensacola, the closest town to Ft. Barrancas, where the C.C.C. District Headquarters and the net control radio station and radio school were located. A C.C.C. camp had once been located there, but it had been closed. The buildings still remained, and the dozen or so radio students slept in one end of one of the vacant army type temporary barracks like those at Selma. The best thing was that we ate in a nearby Army mess hall. What a great improvement over C.C.C. camp food! I could hardly wait for each meal.

I had already learned the code, and was nearly at the code speed we were supposed to have when we finished the training. Capt. Dexter Phillips, the District Signal Officer, had noticed my interest in the radio equipment and he let me assist him in making some modifications to his 1,000 watt ham station, which was in a special room in the same building as the classrooms and the Net Control Radio Station. I was really excited when he let me sit in his “ham shack” as he “worked” amateur radio stations around the world. His radio call was W4CRA, and he jokingly said the “CRA” stood for “Crazy Radio Amateur. I became very interested in Amateur Radio.

The old brick Fort Barrancas (built in 1839), and the very old Spanish Fort San Carlos (1696) were located on the bay overlooking a wide sandy beach. They were only a short walk from our class building and our barracks, and there was plenty of time after school and on weekends to explore the forts, and to enjoy swimming and sunning on the beach. The school was fun, and life was enjoyable. I felt sorry for my barracks buddies back at Selma who were doing things like throwing gravel into a dump truck and eating in the C.C.C. mess hall.

There were many things to see. We were within walking distance of the Naval Air Training Station, and we could go there and watch the small sea planes used for training as they would take off and land in the bay. We saw one take off and then crash land in the bay. In the late afternoon, we could go to the pier where the recreational fishing boats would return with their strings of snapper and grouper.

My Uncle Hundley Thompson, my mother’s brother, was a Lieutenant in charge of one of the huge Coastal Artillery guns at Fort Pickens (built 1829-1834) on Santa Rosa Island. It was directly across the bay from Ft. Barrancas. Actually, Fort Pickens had been built for the kind of guns that existed at the time it was built and could not have supported the new much larger guns. The new hydraulically controlled guns were in reinforced concrete bunkers adjacent to the old fort. Even though the guns were on the other side of the bay, we could feel the concussions when they were fired. When Uncle Hundley learned from my mother that I was at Ft. Barrancas, he contacted me and took me to a movie in Pensacola. Uncle Hundley had always taken an interest in me and continued to do so during his life time. He was indeed a fine fellow.





Front view of Old Fort Carlos - This old fort was originally built by the Spanish in 1696, captured by the French in 1719, retaken by the Spanish and again by the French. Last rebuilt by the Spanish before 1790, captured by the English in 1814 and by the U.S. in 1818.





Old Ft. San Carlos as viewed from top of old Ft. Barrancas, built 1839 - 1844. Fort Pickens, built 1829 - 1834, is directly across the bay on Santa Rosa Island, where the large Coastal Artillery guns were located.
The previously mentioned improvement in food due to eating in the Army mess hall was due to several reasons. Instead of the “field-kitchen” type of food served in the C.C.C., the army kitchen was equipped with good stoves and ovens, and far better serving tables. Instead of eating from metal mess kits, the army mess had ceramic plates and dishes, and regular knives, forks, and spoons.

The food budget per man for army personnel was significantly larger than for C.C.C. men. The army cooks had been trained in a cooks and bakers school, and the Mess Sergeant was specially trained to plan meals and select foods at the market for menus that were healthier and better tasting. The army’s larger food budget provided milk, cereals, deserts, and fruits like apples, oranges, grapefruit, and bananas , which I don’t remember ever getting in the C.C.C. mess.



Our quarters were on the edge of some woods, and in a clearing not very far into the woods was located another large old fort, Fort Redoubt. (1839). Old Fort Barrancas and Fort Redoubt were part of the same coastal defense installation. Although Fort Redoubt was in a restricted area, no guards were posted there. We could easily climb over the cattle fence, walk through the woods, and explore as much as we wished.




Left: - Ft. Redoubt’s dry moat had a bridge, probably a draw bridge, to this entrance. Right: - The moat was drained by a tunnel running a considerable distance to a point in the woods where the land was lower than the bottom of the moat. It terminated in a pipe-like section too small to crawl through. The depicted entrance in one of the rooms lead down to the tunnel, perhaps for maintenance purposes. The room was rather dark, and my camera was placed on a ledge and a long time exposure was made. Several of us crawled to the end of the tunnel and back.




This view is from the top of Ft. Redoubt, and is from above the level of the bridge, then missing, that led into the fort. This wall has ports to provide protection for the entrance, which is below the opening shown above..
Ft. Redoubt - Looking down the side from the entrance end of the fort
Ft. Redoubt - Looking up the moat toward the entrance end of the fort
Kyle Ward at Ft. Redoubt. - The fort was in amazingly good condition. He and I were the most adventuresome of our group of students, and we spent hours exploring the many rooms and examining the interesting architectural features of the old fort. Kyle was very smart, and a good student, but he never showed up in our radio net. He must have been sent to a camp that was transferred to another C.C.C. District when some of the camps were redistricted shortly after we left school. In the summer of 1940, I was walking down a street in Montgomery, Ala., and was passing a fruit and vegetable shop when I heard someone shout “Jim Farrior!”. I was surprised to see Kyle behind the counter serving customers. He rushed out to greet me, but had to return to his customers. I waited a few minutes, but I was in a hurry and told Kyle that I would be back to see him. I regret that it didn’t happen, and I never heard of him again. Perhaps he never served as a radio operator.

The Radio Operator School was completed -- Assigned to Morton, Mississippi

I really enjoyed the radio school, and our lifestyle there, and wished it could have lasted longer. Because I already knew most of what was being taught, it was like a vacation. I pitied my friends back at Selma who were doing hard manual labor in the summer sun. After 2 1/2 months of studying basic radio theory, maintenance, and radio telegraphy at Ft. Barrancas, I was sent on Aug. 20, 1937, to a C.C.C. camp at the Roosevelt State Park 4 miles NW of Morton, Mississippi, where I served as the second operator for several weeks. A few days after I arrived in Morton, the net control operator at Ft. Barrancas passed along some very disturbing news. He and a number of other operators in the net would soon complete their two year maximum stay in the C.C.C., and it appeared that there would soon be insufficient operators available to assure viability of the radio net. Capt. Phillips was trying to find a solution, but the prospects didn’t look good. I had horrible visions of going back to ditch digging, tree planting, or even shoveling gravel.

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