Why were these programs needed in Florida? When the Depression hit Florida, several areas were like the conditions in Tennessee, where there was no running water, no electricity, and not many roads to get around. When the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was started, it was a great assistance for young, unemployed men who had not one way of helping their families. Consequently, they could help their state, work, and help their families all at once. They acquired 30 dollars a month, $5 of which they were permitted to keep. The other $25 went to their families. Another program that was taking place was the Work Progress Administration (WPA). This was much the same as the CCC, one of the ways that the WPA was different, was that it accepted men older than …show more content…
What effects can still be seen in Florida today? The Civilian Conservation Corps, or the CCC, was a relief agency which hired young, unemployed men to plant or restore forests. The young men lived in camps that were to a certain degree like Army barracks. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was another such program designed to put people to labor. One of the reasons that the CCC and the WPA was so important in Florida, was that they provided assistance for the residents of Florida after the major Labor Day hurricane of 1935, one of the most violent storms on record. What effects can still be seen in Florida today? Many things that the CCC and the WPA built are still around today, including the Overseas Highway, the Gilchrist County Courthouse, and the Peter O. Knight Airport. Other things, like the Myakka River State Park, the Florida Caverns State Park, and the Mike Roess Gold Head Branch State Park, were built and the upkeep was maintained by the CCC. Unfortunately the CCC is no longer operating. It closed in 1942 due to a lack in government funding. The WPA shut down in 1943, in part to the bulk of the able-bodied men in the U.S. going overseas to fight in the