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They called me the 120-pound wonder from UC.
With no jobs to choose from for a first co-op during the Depression, John Sherman, 1938 mechanical engineering grad, went and worked his first co-op in the federal Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in West Virginia. He built roads, hoisted telephone poles and lines among fire watchtowers and even put down a few forest fires. We not only fought forest fires but rattlesnakes too, he recalls.
We killed about a dozen rattlesnakes as we erected Burning Rock Fire Tower, and wed fight fires all night long throughout the mountains. There were so many because the moon shiners regularly started fires to camouflage the smoke that gave away the position of their stills. They [the moon shiners] didnt want the federal agents to spot the telltale signal smoke of their stills. Of course, the moon shiners had the initiative and were always just one step ahead of us all the time. We always said what wed do if we caught them because they were making so much work for us. It was all pick-and-shovel work to stop those fires, building fire breaks and then starting back fires. Youd work all night, into the day, no sleep, filthy dirty, hot too. We didnt have any machinery, no bull dozers, no cranes.
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Sherman, now aged 90, adds that the CCC camps brought young men of every economic background together, and some of the fellows were quite tough, so much so that the UC co-ops made it a point to work and play well with the others. Sherman states, I learned to get along with all sorts of people. Thats the best thing I ever got from co-op. There was only one UC co-op in our camp who didnt last long. He was feisty and tried to throw his weight around with some of these fellows. They were a pretty rough, tough bunch, and these guys werent going to take that.
What with hard work and food that came in fits and starts plenty of food at the beginning of the month but not so much toward the end Sherman says he earned the nickname: the 120-pound wonder from UC.
Return to main page of "Co-op Special Report."
Return to main page of excerpts from The Ivory Tower and The Smokestack.
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