Name/Title

CCC Water Spillway

Entry/Object ID

2022.1.150

Description

Water direction spillway.

Photograph Details

Type of Photograph

Original Print

Context

Frank Hyde of Kaysville worked for five years during the United States Great Depression as a supervisor in Civilian Conservation Corp camps. The camps, the result of programs associated with Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, were located in Utah at Kamas, Woods Cross, Pleasant grove, Manila and Black's Fork. During recreational time, Hyde taught boys how to tie fishing flies.

Collection

Forest Barker Collection

Copyright

Copyright Holder

Kaysville-Fruit Heights Museum of History and Art

Restrictions

The public is granted reproduction rights only for limited non-profit, and personal or educational purposes with attribution or citation.

Research Notes

Research Type

Researcher

Person

Fawn B. Morgan

Notes

See Kenneth W. Baldridge, “Reclamation Work of the Civilian Conservation Corps, 1933–1942,” Utah Historical Quarterly 39 no 3 (1971): 265–285; Kenneth W. Baldridge, “The Civilian Conservation Corps” in Utah History Encyclopedia (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1994); Brian Q. Cannon, “Mormons and the New Deal: The 1936 Presidential Election in Utah,” Utah Historical Quarterly 67 no 1 (1999): 6-24; newspaper articles cited in John Forest Barker, "Civilian Conservation Corp." Riding the Snow Horse with My Grandfather: The Story of Frank Hyde, 1881 to 1947, Ch. 14, self-published, 2014; newspaper obituaries of Frank Hyde in Salt Lake Tribune, Davis County Clipper, Kaysville Weekly Reflex.