Barber, Katrine

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This collection is composed of oral history interviews with conscientious objectors from the Waldport Civilian Public Service Camp 56 (the text of this note was adapted from the final report for this project by Katy Barber, Jo Ogden, and Eliza Jones titled: Camp 56: An Oral History Project). During World War II, 12,000 conscientious objectors did “work of national importance under civilian direction” as part of the Civilian Public Service (CPS) program, an alternative service to military participation. The CPS camp at Waldport, named Camp Angell (also spelled Angel), was the fifty-sixth camp to open, and it operated from October 1942 to April 1946. Camp 56, which was administered by the Church of the Brethren, was located about four and one- half miles south of the town of Waldport, Oregon. It sat just east of Highway 101, which runs along the West coast of the United States. The Pacific Ocean, just through some trees on the west side of 101, could be heard but not be seen from the camp itself. The four dorm buildings, kitchen, and dining area in which the men lived, cooked, ate, did office work, prayed, met, and engaged in the fine arts were set in a muddy forest clearing. To the east of the camp lay the steep hills of the Siuslaw National Forest, in which the men felled snags (e.g., cut down dead trees which posed safety and fire hazards), built roads, and planted trees for the U.S. Forest Service. The two towns closest to the CPS camp were Waldport to the north and Yachats just over three miles to the south.

In 1942 the Forest Service re-assigned nearly two dozen men from the Church of the Brethren’s Cascade Locks, Oregon CPS camp (Camp 21) to fight fires on the Oregon coast, and decided to open Camp 56 at Waldport in October. Work of “national importance” done in the Siuslaw National Forest by the men from the Waldport camp included re-planting acres that had been destroyed in the 1934 Blodgett Burn, building roads into the forest, and acting as fire lookouts during the dry summer months. The camp’s population fluctuated with transfers which were frequent in CPS, but residency averaged 120 men at any given time. Most of the objectors who were interviewed for this project were from religious farming communities in the Midwest, but several came from more urban, and less religious, homes.

In 1943, objectors from the Santa Barbara, California, Cascade Locks, and Waldport camps requested that NSBRO open a school in the Fine Arts where professional fine artists could find fellowship. The Brethren Service Committee chose CPS 56 for the location, and men began transferring there to begin the Fine Arts group in the spring of 1944, but Selective Service eventually eliminated this transfer option. Men in the Fine Arts program staged plays, presented weekly play readings, printed program folders and collections of plays, short stories, and poetry, and hosted a concert series. Some men focused on painting and drawing while others spent time sculpting and weaving, leaving behind a historically remembered legacy. Artists also distributed their work to other camps and bookstores across the country, and performed plays and music for public audiences. Although the Waldport camp is best known for this aspect of its history, a minority of the men held there actually participated. Many narrators of the interviews collected here do not remember the group at all, or relate that it formed after their time in Waldport. Several of the narrator’s lives, however, were transformed by Waldport’s Fine Arts group, which attracted professional artists and musicians and encouraged others to pursue artistic professions, particularly Vladimir Dupre, William Everson, and William Shank. There is no question that the Fine Arts group was a vibrant art center and an important part of the camp. By declaring themselves conscientious objectors and entering Civilian Public Service, the narrators of these interviews became part of a dramatic minority in America during the Second World War. Although this commonality separated them from the majority of American society, the narrators express a wide range of beliefs about topics specific to the camp, such as work and administration, and broader issues such as pacifism and conscription. The internal and public debates that arose from these differences are particularly poignant in the narrators’ memories of their time at Waldport. Although conscientious objectors in CPS comprised a tiny minority of those caught up in the war, this oral history collection and other materials related to CPS confirm an enduring and active legacy of pacifist resistance.

From the guide to the Civilian Public Service Camp 56 Oral History Project Records, 2003-2003, (Lewis & Clark College Special Collections and Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Center for Columbia River History collection, 1854-2007, 1990-2000 Oregon Historical Society Research Library
creatorOf Civilian Public Service Camp 56 Oral History Project Records, 2003-2003 Lew s & Clark College Special Collections and Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
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associatedWith Center for Columbia River History corporateBody
associatedWith United States. Forest Service. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Civilian Public Service. Camp #56 (Waldport, Ore.)
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Birth 1970

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Ark ID: w6q654db

SNAC ID: 70145688