Skip To Content
WWII oral history subject featured on PBS series
September 3, 2010
Early/online registration for the fall 2010 semester is now under way.

Read The Details »
Schedule of Classes »
Apply online now to PJC »

NOTE: This space is reserved for urgent information concerning class scheduling, such as campus closure due to inclement weather, and other aspects of campus life. When a bulletin is available, this tab will appear automatically.
The portal for those registered for online instruction and Internet classes. Click one of the links below to connect to WebCT.

On-Campus WebCT »
Off-Campus WebCT »
Get Connection Help »

Register, check grades, print schedules, obtain transcripts and more. Click one of the links below to connect to Campus Connect.

On-Campus Campus Connect »
Off-Campus Campus Connect »
Get Connection Help »

Search The PJC Site

PJC Dragons Scoreboard

Photograph

Claude Tyler in the Civilian Conservation Corps.

Posted or edited: 10.01.09 ... PJC Information Services
Print this article | E-mail this article »

Claude Tyler of Blossom, Texas, will be featured on Episode 5 of the new Ken Burns PBS series The National Parks: America’s Best Idea Thursday on PBS station channel 13 beginning at 7 p.m.

Tyler, a veteran of World War II and the Civilian Conservation Corps, was interviewed by his friend and PJC history instructor Lisa Johnson for the college’s World War II oral history project a few years ago.

“A special memory Mr. Tyler recounted during our interview was his ability to save his father from bleeding to death after a farm accident because the CCC taught him first aid,” Johnson recalled. “He had just been interviewed by the Ken Burns company for the current national parks series at the time of our interview, and I am so excited that his service in the CCC will be recognized nationally tonight.”

The series’ Web site says of Tyler: “During the Depression, 3 million Americans found much-needed jobs — and money to send home to their families — in the Civilian Conservation Corps, improving roads and buildings and planting trees in national parks and national forests. Claude Tyler, of Blossom, Texas, was sent to Death Valley and then Lassen Volcanic National Park.”