CCC Chow Line in Groton, Vermont.
Title
CCC Chow Line in Groton, Vermont.
Creator
Lockard, Charles, Vermont State Forestry Dept.
Description
The Civilian Conservation Corps, a Depression-era program to provide jobs for unemployed men in the Vermont forests, brought some African-Americans to Vermont. According to some histories of the time, this was the first time that many Vermonters had seen African-Americans in their midst. Interestingly, most photos of CCC activities, including large group portraits, in the collections of the Vermont Historical Society, do not show any Black CCC members, so it is not clear how many Blacks actually served in Vermont. This is one example, however, of a photo of an African-American CCC member waiting for food while doing work in Groton State Forest. These men were probably in Camp 146 which drew its personnel from western Massachusetts.
Date
December 1933
Subject
Source
Vermont Historical Society picture file (F-CCC-
Identifier
CCCChowLineGroton_Full.jpg
Format
jpeg
Coverage
Groton (Vt.)
Original Format
Repository
Vermont Historical Society Library, 60 Washington Street, Suite 1, Barre, Vermont 05641
Collection
Citation
Lockard, Charles, Vermont State Forestry Dept., “CCC Chow Line in Groton, Vermont.,” Digital Vermont: A Project of the Vermont Historical Society, accessed November 21, 2024, https://digitalvermont.org/items/show/1870.