Inscription
Camp SCS-4 (Huron): located on SE corner of State Fair Grounds Companies: 2770 - - 10/31/35-10/7/37; 4725V (10/7/37-8/15/41). The Civilian Conservation Corps was a federal work-relief program during the Great Depression. From 1933-1942, the CCC provided work for 31,097 jobless men in South Dakota - - about 1700 war veterans, 4554 American Indians, and 2834 supervisors.
The U.S. Army provided 200-man camps, food, clothing, medical care, and pay, and educational, recreational, and religious programs. The Office of Indian Affairs provided similar services for units on Indian reservations. Work projects of the SCS-4 were done on private land under supervision of the Soil Conservation Service.
WWI veterans of Company 4725V and North Dakota enrollees of Company 2770 worked on the 190,000-acre Wolsey Shue Creek erosion project (the first in the state) and the Karnstrum demonstration farm 3 1/2 miles northeast of Wolsey. They used shelterbelts, cover crops, rough tillage, strip farming and stock dams to control run-off and improve grazing utilization.
They built Third Street Dam in Huron, Lake Dudley Dam near Hitchcock and the Lake Dakota Dam and Boy Scout Camp near Miller. Tours showing results to farmers aided in the organization of soil conservation districts in Beadle, Clark and Spink Counties. Erected in 1990 by CCC Alumni, the South Dakota State Historical Society, the South Dakota Department of Transportation and the Soil Conservation Service.
Location
Sources
More markers in Beadle
Where Does The West Begin?
Traditionally the American West has begun at the edge of the settled areas, always advancing with the sun.
Veterans Memorial Fountain Beadle County
Vietnam War Myron D. Kjellerson, James R. Plate, Roger L. Porter, Theodore H. Voigt, Robert J. Whites, Larry W. Norgaard, William D....
Wolsey: A Crossroad of the Heartland/Wolsey Notables
Wolsey has been a crossroad of the heartland of South Dakota from its beginnings.
Yale Public School
The town of Yale at intersection of, SD
The town of Yale was platted in the fall of 1888 after a branch of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railroad, later renamed the Great...
