This exhibit showcases the compelling stories of Prince William Forest Park, a 15,000 acres woodland where nature and history unite. Over the centuries, people worked and lived off this forested landscape and called it home.

From the 1880s, for 40 years, men and young children toiled in Cabin Branch Pyrite Mine and worked their small farms for sustenance. In 1936, with the Great Depression and the mine closure, the Roosevelt Administration established the Chopawamsic Recreational Demonstration Area. Over 2,000 Civilian Conservation Corps enrollees constructed roads, dams, and cabins. These housed generations of happy American children escaping from the harsh realities of a city-bound childhood. In the 1940s, the camps were used to train spies of the Office of Strategic Services, later the Central Intelligence Agency, who were sent behind enemy lines during World War II.

     
     
     
     
     
     
  Multimedia + Videos
+ The Forest    Today
+ Camp Tour
  Park Links
+ Early History
+ Nature
+ Other Places
  Teaching with Museum Collections
Lesson Plan

Park Home Page | Credits