CCC Camp 880 Flagpole - Aransas National Wildlife Refuge - Austwell TX USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 28° 17.376 W 096° 48.599
14R E 714778 N 3131229
All that remains of the large camp constructed by and for for Civilian Conservation Corps Company 880, which built the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, is the concrete base the concrete support for the camp's flagpole
Waymark Code: WM161Q9
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 04/15/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Mark1962
Views: 1

Blasterz had no idea that the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge (then known as the Aransas Migratory Waterfowl Refuge) was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps and was administered by the Bureau of Biological Survey (now US Fish & Wildlife Service), part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA).

Once we read this information sign near the fishing pier and the picnic grounds, all of the older concrete infrastructure we spotted along the way in the refuge makes sense. There are numerous concrete culverts, drainage ditches, embankments, a spillway and service roads that all looked very 1940s to us - and now we know all of that was built by the Camp 880 of the CCC.

However, the only remnant of CCC Camp 880 itself is the ruin of a concrete flagpole support and its concrete base overlooking the San Antonio Bay.

The information sign at the CCC Camp 880 site reads as follows:

"BUILDING ARANSAS NWR

Today, all that remains of the CCC’s construction efforts is a concrete flagpole base still visible at this site.

[2 historic photos]

In 1937, Pres. Franklin D Roosevelt signed the executive order creating Aransas Migratory Waterfowl Refuge.

[Photo of President Roosevelt signing the Executive Order creating Aransas NWR]

[photo of the page of the Federal Register where the Executive Order was published]

Aransas Migratory Waterfowl Refuge was established on December 31, 1937, as “a Refuge and breeding ground for migratory birds and other wildlife . . . “ and “. . . for use as an inviolate sanctuary, or for any other management purpose, for migratory birds.

[Group photo of CCC workers from February 14, 1939]

Shortly after the Refuge was established, workers from the civilian conservation Corps (CCC) and Works progress administration (WPA) were given the task of building the Refuge’s infrastructure.

The CCC and WPA were relief programs put into effect by President Roosevelt during the Great Depression.

Barracks, staff quarters, supply storage, maintenance shop, and mess hall facilities once stood in what is now the Refuge fishing pier area."

The waymark coordinates take you to the remains of the flagpole, the last vestige of the CCC camp. To get to the flagpole you must walk past sign.

For more on the New Deal programs that created this refuge, and that live on today, visit the Living New Deal website here: (visit link)

"Project type: Wildlife Refuges, Forestry and Agriculture, Parks and Recreation

Agency: Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), Bureau of Biological Survey (WPA)

Started: 1938

Site Survival: Extant

DESCRIPTION
Aransas National Wildlife Refuge is a 114,657-acre, federally protected area at San Antonio Bay on the coast of Texas. The refuge was established by Executive Order 7784 on December 31, 1937 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as the Aransas Migratory Waterfowl Refuge. The name was changed in 1939. It was created under the Bureau of Biological Survey and is administered today by the US Fish and Wildlife Service (created in 1940 from previous agencies).

The refuge was set aside to protect the breeding grounds of migratory birds and the vanishing wildlife of coastal Texas. In particular, Aransas was the focal point of the national and worldwide effort to rescue the Whooping Crane from extinction when only a handful of birds remained alive.

In October 1938, Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) Company 880 established a camp south of Austwell, Texas to work on the newly established refuge. CCC crews built roads, ditches, fire breaks, and the residence facilities for the refuge. They constructed part of the spillway for Burgentine Lake, which serves as a major resting area for migratory waterfowl. They also graded the road to Austwell."
Type: Remnant

Fee: Yes, but there are many ways to get in for free

Hours:
Daily, from 30 minutes before sunrise until 30 minutes after sunset


Related URL: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
Original photographs showing additional views of the Ruin/Remnant or even just its current condition are encouraged. Please describe your visit, especially if no additional photos are available. Did you like the Ruin or Remnant? What prompted you to see the Ruin or Remnant?
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Benchmark Blasterz visited CCC Camp 880 Flagpole - Aransas National Wildlife Refuge - Austwell TX USA 04/15/2022 Benchmark Blasterz visited it