The Land :: www.TheLandOnline.com

Back Roads

January 15, 2010

Back Roads: Veterans’ legacy

Originally published in the January 8, 2010, print edition.

Sibley State Park, Kandiyohi County — Three quarters of a century ago a westbound train steamed into New London in Kandiyohi County. Most of the passengers who stepped onto the depot’s platform that day were unemployed World War I veterans.

They had just come from a Veterans Conservation Corps camp near Two Harbors. The 150 or so men were headed to nearby Sibley State Park. The VCC men were older than those who joined the similarly-monikered Civilian Conservation Corps, but just like the CCC were part of a national campaign to put millions of people to work on much-needed conservation projects.

By today’s standards the then 300-plus acre park wasn’t much, according to Park Naturalist Dick Clayton. But Sibley’s 3 Bear Camp, so-called because of the camp’s three furry mascots, was part of a national operation inspired by foreward-thinking conservationists, economists and military leaders. Both the CCC and the VCC were run jointly by the U.S. Army and the National Park Service, along with other state and federal agencies.

Clayton says that today’s park visitors are still benefiting from the legacy of those hard-working men and their visionary organizers. The most obvious legacy is what is probably the most spectacular group of hewn stone rustic buildings in Minnesota. All told, there are 10 small and large buildings made from pink and gray granite, white oak and red cedar. Remarkably, the granite was waste stone from quarries near Cold Spring and Rockville.

The buildings built by the VCC men, with the help of a few experienced stone masons and wood workers, became the inspiration for future buildings at Itasca State Park and even various national parks. The buildings, which are still in use, aren’t the only legacy left in Sibley State Park by the VCC.

“We still use a lot of the park infrastructure that they built,” Clayton said. “Their work was very high quality. They were proud of their work.”

Not only did the men of 3 Bear Camp build the stone and log buildings, they constructed barracks, a recreation hall which included a library, a hospital and other wooden, less permanent structures. For these men it was good to be back at work. The VCC camp story is told in words and photos at a park kiosk near Lake Andrew beach.

Text Only
Back Roads
  • Back Roads: Direct and to the point Back Roads: Direct and to the point

    Whole Farm Cooperative, Long Prairie, Minn.

    February 11, 2011 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: Baby needs new shoes Back Roads: Baby needs new shoes

    “Most horses are remarkably gentle, even patient during the shoeing process.”

    January 28, 2011 3 Photos

  • Back Roads: Deep thoughts Back Roads: Deep thoughts

    The Great American Think-Off was an ambitious project in the early 1990s when local free thinkers created the idea for a philosophy competition. Since then people from around the country, and world, have come to debate some of life’s central questions.

    January 13, 2011 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: Schweiss menagerie Back Roads: Schweiss menagerie

    Arnie Schweiss’ herd of horses — three Quarter Horses and two Arabians — stand at attention to honor those who drive by the Schweiss home in New Ulm, Minn. They never flinch. The fact that they are made of fiberglass doesn’t lessen the effect.

    January 13, 2011 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: Greetings from Amish country Back Roads: Greetings from Amish country

    Have you ever seen a handmade Amish greeting card?

    January 13, 2011 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: In cod we trust Back Roads: In cod we trust

    Not every town would want to be known as the Lutefisk Capital of the United States, but Madison proclaims it proudly, on the base of a 25-foot-long fiberglass codfish along Highway 75. They named him Lou T. Fisk.

    November 5, 2010 3 Photos

  • Back Roads: Sweet Finnish Back Roads: Sweet Finnish

    In days gone by the old Finns were short on leavening for their bread. So they made flat bread. That Finnish flat bread was one of the things that defined your Finnishness. These days Finns, and those of us not lucky enough to be Finnish, can get old-time flat bread at the Menagha Bake Shop in Menagha. Well, it’s not really the same as old-timers bread.

    October 22, 2010 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: A world apart Back Roads: A world apart

    Many look to escape the summer heat of the southern plains, others come to kayak the beautiful autumn shoreline of Lake Superior, and the adventurous brave the frigid northern winter to experience dogsledding.

    October 13, 2010 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: History on the hill Back Roads: History on the hill

    In 1883, the Todd County Commissioners agreed to build a courthouse high on a hill above the little frontier village of Long Prairie. They spent a grand sum of $20,000 during a time when most anything the ordinary citizen needed was valued in pennies. This statement about the solidity and longevity of justice and law was certainly affected by the dark deeds of autumn 1879.

    September 24, 2010 1 Photo

  • Back Roads: Prairie giants Back Roads: Prairie giants

    When visiting the bison at Blue Mounds State Park in southwest Minnesota, watching them graze on the plentiful prairie grass, be sure to keep one eye on their tails.

    September 10, 2010 1 Photo