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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Camp Francis Cook, a CCC outpost on Mount Spokane.

Picnic tables at the 1933 Vista House offer a great place to eat a snack and enjoy the view. Pioneer Francis Cook loved the view and hoped the land would someday be a park so everyone could venture to the top. Crews from the Civilian Conservation Corps built the stone structure, now a day-use facility within the ski area.
Picnic tables at the 1933 Vista House offer a great place to eat a snack and enjoy the view. Pioneer Francis Cook loved the view and hoped the land would someday be a park so everyone could venture to the top. Crews from the Civilian Conservation Corps built the stone structure, now a day-use facility within the ski area.

The Great Depression brought thousands of young men to the Inland Northwest to work in the Civilian Conservation Corps. It was FDR's project to get idle young men off the street, somewhat isolated, in camps across the West, where they planted trees, built trails and shelters and worked on other projects. About 200 camped at Mount Spokane. The program successfully put young hands to work, hands that otherwise might have been wandering aimlessly, riding the rails from place to place or turning to crime. 

An old woodshed from the era of the Civilian Conservation Corps is still standing near the old CCC camp.
An old woodshed from the era of the Civilian Conservation Corps is still standing near the old CCC camp.

Monday's column will be about Camp Francis Cook on Mount Spokane. Cook, a pioneer newspaperman and developer, plotted and built the road to the top of the mountain. He built a cabin on a lower mountain, but thought the top would be a perfect place to picnic and take in the expansive views. Some of Cook's vision came to pass when the CCC crews set up camp and put their unskilled labor to work. People called the CCC "Roosevelt's Tree Army", partly because of the quasi-military structure and because it took young men from around the nation and shipped them to the West, where they did unglamorous work in inhospitable places.



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