Jémez State Monument, 18160
Highway 4,
Jémez Springs NM 87025, 19 June 2019: Pueblo and Spanish Mission Church of
San José de los Jémez ruins, excavated in the 1930s by New Deal
Civilian
Conservation Corps[1,2].
References
- Elmo R. Richardson,
The
Civilian Conservation Corps and the Orgins of the New Mexico State Park
System, 6 Natural Resources Journal 2 (1966), p.251:
State officials were gratified when the CCC erected more than a hundred
camps in New Mexico during the first three six-month work periods. Most of
these camps were assigned to the national forests. In Cibola National
Forest, east of Albuquerque, for example, the boys constructed the popular
Sandia Loop Drive. The vital importance of water resources in the arid
region enhanced the value of projects supervised by the Bureau of
Reclamation. At Elephant Butte Lake in the south, the Corps built check
dams, streamwalls, and a shore line road. In the Las Cruces area, Grazing
Service camps improved the condition of the rangelands. Perhaps the most
unique project in the state was the partial restoration of ruined Spanish
missions at Jemez and Quarai, performed under the supervision of University
of New Mexico archeologists.
- 300 Years of Dust, Happy Days (the
newspaper of the CCC), Vol.III, No.22, Saturday, October 12, 1935, p.1.