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he Crewport, Washington Farm Labor
Camp was constructed by the Farm Security Administration in the
early 1940's, to house migrant farm worker families from the Plains
states who were uprooted by the Great Depression and the dust storms
of the 1930's.
When it first opened in May, 1941, the camp was known as the Granger
Farm Workers Camp, because of its location just two miles north
of the City of Granger, Washington. Initially, only white Dust Bowl
"refugee" families were housed at the Camp. By the mid-1940's,
however, Mexican American migrant farm worker families from the
Southwest, mostly from Texas, were also given shelter at Crewport.
These migrant farm workers were recruited to the Yakima Valley because
of the farm labor shortage caused by World War II.
This web site captures and weaves the history of some the white
Dust Bowl and Mexican American migrant families who resided at Crewport
during the 1940's through the late 1960's when the Camp was closed.
Because there is little written documentation of the history of
the community and its families, oral history interviews provided
important new information about the Camp and tell its story below.
Faculty and students of the Partnership for Rural Improvement and
the Chicana/o Studies Program at Yakima Valley Community College
(YVCC), Yakima, Washington collected interviews and produced the
web site.
The site is co-sponsored by the Center for Columbia River History
at Vancouver, Washington with a grant from the U.S. Department of
Education. The Project was conceived partly to provide experience
learning opportunities for students enrolled in YVCC's Chicana/o
Studies Program. The Project's staff also wanted to document the
stories of community residents whose history is as important to
the nation's past as the stories of "great men" and wars
that dominate texts. You are invited to explore this web exhibit
to understand more about these families - their hopes, their dreams,
and their achievements.
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