Raymond W. High, Abram D. Landis, Merle Kolb and Elmer Zimmerman are near and in the truck that carried supplies to their work sites in the Shenandoah National Park. High and Landis were Mennonites from Lancaster County.
Men in Civilian Public Service camp no. 45 near Luray, Virginia, operating from 1942 to 1946, worked in the Shenandoah National Park on a variety of projects including: wildlife surveys, blister rust control, construction of lookout towers, maintenance of National Park Headquarters, emergency farm work, clearing highways of snow, and firefighting. Ernest Ropp, Titus L. Sensenig and Clarence A. Hurst are pictured working next to the road. Sensenig and Hurst were Mennonites from Lancaster County.
John H. Rudy, a Mennonite of Lancaster County, served for about two years with a Civilian Public Service Camp. He is reading papers from a sruveying project.
A crew of three men from Civilian Public Service camp no. 45 near Luray, Virginia - Titus H. Horning, Sanford Headings, and Max Strickler - prepare for their assignment to survey for plant diseases such as bluster rust. Horning was from Lancaster County.
Horses being removed from a ship in Germany. The horses were sent by the Civilian Public Service to Poland after World War II as a war relief project. D. Ernest Weinhold, a Mennonite of Lancaster County, helped with this project.
Ship carrying horse to Europe passing through a canal near Kiel, Germany. The horses were sent by the Civilian Public Service to Poland after World War II as a war relief project. D. Ernest Weinhold, a Mennonite of Lancaster County, helped with this project.