Page:Michael Welsh - Dunes and Dreams, A History of White Sands National Monument (1995).pdf/64

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New Deal, New Monument, New Mexico 1933–1939

Contributing to Happer's woes at White Sands were the unexpected legal delays caused by the mineral-rights leaseholders at Garton Lake. Happer solicited testimonials from NPS and state officials to the scarcity of oil on the property, hoping that this would suffice to release federal funds. Tom Charles also asked for monies for road construction in the monument, as three accidents at the park entrance in February and March caused two fatalities and serious injury to nine other passengers. The failure of the well casing also harmed plans for the bird sanctuary, as muddy water and botulism (alkali poisoning) killed fish and fowl alike. Then the leaseholders either refused to deed their claims to the NPS, or tried to get more money from the government than the appraised mineral value.[1]

The year 1937 marked a turning point for White Sands and its benefactor, the Roosevelt administration. Because 1936 had been an election year, FDR's staff had released large sums of money for public works projects to attract voters' attention. This strategy thus increased White Sands' emergency relief monies by a factor of 39, from $2,400 in fiscal year 1936 to $78,161 in the following year. For the next three years White Sands received smaller, though still substantial grants for construction work, so that by 1940 the federal government's relief investment topped $256,000. Completion of highway paving and the visitors center-headquarters complex owed much to this generosity. In addition, the NPS could mount a serious campaign to identify a stable source of water for the expanding visitation base (108,000 in 1937, a figure not to be matched until after World War II).[2]

The infusion of such federal capital made Tom Charles' role at the monument less critical than when he served as the only park service representative at the dunes. WPA construction of employee residences brought more staff, which in turn changed the strategy for counting visitors. Early in 1937 Frank Pinkley asked Charles to adjust his numbers for variations in weekday and weekend usage. To do so, Charles and a "volunteer," Barry Mohun (the son of a wealthy eastern family who paid his salary at White Sands for six months), counted cars for 59 days, compared these to the written registrations, and calculated that 14 percent of all visitors signed the log book at the


  1. Fred A. Weller, NPS Regional Attorney, to Robert C. Dow, Regional Attorney, Resettlement Administration, Amarillo, TX, February 14, 1936; Gould to Maier, n.d. 1936; E.H. Wells, President, New Mexico School of Mines, to Gould, February 14, 1936; H.A. Kiker, Special Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Santa Fe, to Dow, June 17, 1936; Happer to Randau, July 28, 1936; Borell, "Special Report on White Sands National Monument," August 4, 1936; Victor E. Cahalane, Acting Chief, NPS Wildlife Division, to NPS Region Three Officer, September 21, 1936, RG79, NPS, WHSA Files, Denver FRC; Ward Charles, ECW (Emergency Conservation Work) Technician, Tularosa, NM, to J.E. Stablein, Acting Regional Grazier, U.S. Department of the Interior, Albuquerque, May 26, 1936; Pinkley to G.F. Conroy, New Mexico State Highway Engineer, Santa Fe, March 21, 1936, Historical Files, WHSA (1936), January 1–May 30, 1936; Maier to NPS Director, August 21, 1936; H.E. Rothrock, Acting Chief, NPS Naturalist Division, to Region Three Officer, October 3, 1936, RG79, NPS 1934–1947, RDA, Box 202.
  2. R.G. Finney, Chief, Fiscal Division, NPS Region Three, Santa Fe, to SWNM Superintendent Miller, September 10, 1941, RG79, NPS, WHSA Files, Denver FRC; Schneider-Hector, White Sands, 103.