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In 1934, the state Department of Public Welfare established Camp Fairchance (originally called Camp Boone), at Low Gap, Boone County, at the site of a former Civilian Conservation Corps camp. Camp Fairchance was part of a system of camps established to rescue children from families especially hard hit by the Great Depression. The camps were segregated by race. Camp Fairchance provided nourishment and recreation for White children from relief families judged by public health nurses to be at risk for tuberculosis or other diseases.
The children at Camp Fairchance attended a camp school staffed by unemployed teachers working for the Works Progress Administration, a federal program. Campers could join a Boy Scout troop, a 4-H club, a drum and bugle corps, and other organizations. Children remained at Fairchance up to three months, and then they returned to their families, or to foster homes.
— Authored by Jerry Bruce Thomas
Sources
Thomas, Jerry Bruce. An Appalachian New Deal: West Virginia in the Great Depression. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1998.
Beehler, William N. Relief, Work and Rehabilitation. West Virginia Relief Administration. Charleston: Matthews Printing & Litho. Co., 1934.
Charleston Gazette, 10/28/1934 & 5/17/1936.
West Virginia Department of Public Welfare. Biennial Report. 1936.
Cite This Article
Thomas, Jerry Bruce. "Camp Fairchance." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. 24 April 2024. Web. Accessed: 21 November 2024.
24 Apr 2024