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ON THE WESTSIDE
(Source of top postcard: Florida Collection at the Main Library, Jacksonville; bottom photo, Florida State Archives, Tallahassee)
Probably dating from the 1920s, the top image was a hand-colored postcard from Camp Foster, a defunct National Guard base in Jacksonville. The bottom picture shows the camp under construction during the Twenties.
A HOT SPOT -- There's an area of land, Black Point, that juts into the St. Johns River on the Westside. It's now the site of the sprawling Naval Air Station Jacksonville, with large planes humming over Roosevelt Boulevard as they land.
Black Point has long bustled with activity. Beginning in 1909, National Guardsmen practiced in the area, only to be replaced by army men during World War I. Quartermasters trained at Camp Johnston, a complex that contained over 600 buildings and America's second largest rifle range (behind the one at Ohio's Camp Perry). Following the end of WWI in 1919, the National Guard returned, changing the base's name to "Camp Foster." This locale shifted gears yet again after the Great Depression kicked off in 1929.
CLICK HERE for a couple of old birds-eye views of Black Point.
THREADBARE -- "Well, honey, just wasn't nothin'." When asked about the Great Depression, this was standard answer given by the grandmother of the website manager of JacksonvilleStory.com. Born near Gainesville, Florida, "Granny" had to feed five of her children during those trying times. Later in life, she almost never talked about the era during which America's jobless rate hit 25%.
Homeless
people flooded into Florida during the Depression.
In
downtown Jacksonville, Hemming Park served as the starting point for
many Black Point-bound men. The police and the Salvation Army
directed homeless males to the park, where a truck picked them up
A NEW BEGINNING -- One of the camp's originators was
local leader John P. Ingle. Some interesting details came from a
1939 federal government interview with him:
The work camp at Camp Foster proved the first of its kind in Florida. It even served as the forerunner of the Civilian Conservation Corps camps, claimed John Ingle. Starting in 1933, the successful CCC provided food, shelter, and work to young unemployed men across the nation.
FROM TREE SURGEONS TO TEXAS RANGERS -- Back
in Jax, the managers of Camp Foster believed that a mind was a terrible
thing to waste. In Mr. Ingle's words, "There were all kinds of
men (at the camp) -- a large percentage of them being college men from
university and technical institutions. These men were appointed
as teachers to groups forming classes in electrical work, simple
engineering, carpentry work and other mechanical trades...
Camp
Foster tried to find a niche for each of its residents. As Mr.
Ingle explained, "There were cooks, laundrymen, bakers, etc., all of
them were given employment at tasks for which they were particularly
fitted... One man was tree surgeon who took some of the men and
instructed them as to the care of the trees and shrubbery on the
reservation. Another man had had medical training and had charge
of the 'first aid' station... I remember one who was an ex-Texas
Ranger. We let him head the police force, which maintained order
in the Camp. Everybody was on their honor, and men arrived and
left any time they desired... By the way, the policemen were
distinguished by a piece of blue cloth around one arm...
REST & RELAXATION -- Life at Camp Foster wasn't
all toil. As Mr. Ingle noted, "(T)here were actually quite a
number of athletes, and they organized boxing contests, basketball
clubs, baseball clubs -- challenging other teams, which developed into
quite a feature of the Camp -- the prize fights particularly being of
much interest to the people of Duval County. On the nights these
contests were held, there would be great crowds... There were well
trained musicians -- the place was just littered with persons who could
play some musical instrument. A (camp) band was
organized...
Camp Foster attempted to maintain the dignity of its residents, according to Mr. Ingle: "We were particularly anxious that there be no women case workers assigned to the Camp, as we felt the men were sensitive (about their plight)... There was no casework and we asked no questions... We figured that a great number of them, embarrassed by lack of funds,... were hiding under assumed names."
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED -- With its population dwindling to about 175, the transient facility at Camp Foster closed its gates in October 1935. It had fulfilled the goal of providing a second chance to homeless males. True, the nation's economic ills did continue until December 1941, when World War II finally provided the Depression's cure. However, Camp Foster wasn't so badly needed anymore. In part, this was because some of the homeless men had been able to establish permanent residence in Duval County, therefore becoming certified for employment under the WPA., a federal government work relief program. Furthermore, the younger men were often enrolled in the CCC, while other transients were helped to return to their former homes. But this didn't mean an end to the activity at Black Point...
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