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Civilian Conservation Corps Builds Glide Ranger Station

During the Great Depression, the Civilian Conservation Corps, known by its initials as the CCC, built the Glide Ranger Station to house the staff of the northern district of the Umpqua National Forest.

The Corps recruited young men from across the country to work in the forest.  At first, their letters home told of homesickness and loneliness, but soon were filled with stories of adventure and pride in a job well done.

Architects had designed the structure in a “rustic” style to feature native stone and timber. Though the interior has been remodeled, the building’s exterior has stayed the same since it was built in 1938. Window shutters have hand-forged strap hinges and pine tree cut-outs; and the CCC’s emblematic pine tree designs were carved at the end of each gable.

Since 1993 the cabin has housed the Colliding Rivers Information Center near the head-to-head confluence of the North Umpqua River and Little River. Volunteers staff the Center from Memorial Day to Labor Day.

The rustic Glide Ranger Station built by the young men of the CCC still serves the public after 77 years.

Source:  Brochure Glide Ranger Station Cabin and the Civilian Conservation Corps

Dr. James S. Long was an As It Was contributor until his passing in January of 2016. He met editor Kernan Turner when Kernan spoke to the Roseburg writers’ club about contributing to JPR's As Is Was series. His contributions to As It Was ranged from a story about the recovery of whitetail deer at the old Dunning Ranch to the story of Nick Botner’s private orchard near Yoncalla created to preserve over 3,000 heritage apple varieties.