CCC House -- Fort Davis State Park, Fort Davis TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 30° 35.754 W 103° 55.357
13R E 603287 N 3385313
The native stone CCC House at the trailhead for the CCC Trail in Fort Davis State Park was built by (and named for) the Civilian Conservation Corps
Waymark Code: WMTXWB
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 01/20/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 2

The CCC House is located at the end of Skyline Drive along the CCC trail at Fort Davis State park. Men of the CCC built this park and its beautiful Indian Lodge in only 2 years.

The CCC House was built by the Corps at a rock overlook with one of the most beautiful vistas in the park for guests to enjoy.

In 2016, Blasterz enjoyed a star party here. (Antennas that marred the house when we were here in 2010 have been removed -- YAY.)

From the TPWD website: (visit link)

"Park Location
Jeff Davis County, 4 miles northwest of Fort Davis, State Highway 17 to State Highway 118 north to Park Road 3

CCC Company
879, 881, 1856

Activity Dates
1933-1935, 1940-1942

CCC Construction
Skyline Drive, Overlook Shelter, two Mess Halls (both adobe; one used by CCC as recreation hall for a short time, currently a residence; the other currently storage), Stone Picnic Tables, Stone Fireplaces, Stone Steps, and Latrine. See also the text for Indian Lodge."

DAVIS MOUNTAINS

An extensive mountain range provides the setting for one of the most majestic of the state parks and one of the earliest CCC projects in Texas. Work at Davis Mountains State Park commenced in June 1933.

The Texas legislature specifically directed the new State Parks Board in 1923 to investigate the Davis Mountains for a major destination park to attract both overland motorists and train travelers from nearby Marfa and Alpine. But the State Parks Board failed to obtain land donations or appropriations. Then in 1927 the legislature instructed the State Highway Department to build the Davis Mountains State Park Highway on donated right of way, now the Davis Mountains Scenic Loop (State Highways 118 and 166). The new byway construction created much-needed jobs for the region and in the 1930s facilitated construction of McDonald Observatory by the University of Texas on Mount Locke. But by 1933 the Great Depression had so devastated the local ranching economy that landowners at last agreed to donate the initial 560 acres for a state park in Keesey Canyon, along the highway toward Mount Locke. The National Park Service then assisted the design and the CCC built inside the park a five-mile scenic road, carved in switchbacks, ascending to the top of the ridge between Hospital and Keesey Canyons. From this ridge, visitors enjoy breathtaking panoramas, including a view of the 19th-century military installation Fort Davis, which lent the adjacent valley town its name, and McDonald Observatory on a mountaintop to the north. Likely designed by William C. Caldwell, the stone overlook shelter at the top resembles the prototype that National Park Service architect Herbert Maier designed in 1924 for Yosemite National Park, right down to the "picture window" framing a fabulous view for mountain trekkers resting inside the shelter."
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Recent Visits/Logs:
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run26.2 visited CCC House -- Fort Davis State Park, Fort Davis TX 05/16/2020 run26.2 visited it
Benchmark Blasterz visited CCC House -- Fort Davis State Park, Fort Davis TX 12/22/2016 Benchmark Blasterz visited it
WalksfarTX visited CCC House -- Fort Davis State Park, Fort Davis TX 10/08/2011 WalksfarTX visited it

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