• Ouabache State Park - Bluffton IN
    CCC Camp #1592 did extensive work in Ouabache State Park, including, among other things, building shelters and the Kunkel Lake. Today, the park offers a tour of CCC structures. In 2014, a new statue commemorating the CCC was installed in the park.
  • Ouabache State Park Custodian's Cottage - Bluffton IN
    The custodian's cottage was completed in 1936 by New Deal agencies (most likely either the Civilian Conservation Corps or the Works Progress Administration ). The style of the cottage is classified as parks rustic. Today the building is the assistant park manger's residence.
  • Ouabache State Park Entrance Marker - Bluffton IN
    The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) or Works Progress Administration (WPA) completed an entrance marker to Ouabache State Park. The marker consists of two stone posts that are about 10' high.
  • Ouabache State Park Wells County State Forest Lodge - Bluffton IN
    The Wells County State Forest Lodge sits on a lightly wooded hillside. The Lodge was completed between 1935 and 1936. The Wells County State Forest Lodge was probably constructed by both the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Works Progress Administration (WPA).
  • Ouabache State Park Wells County State Forest Service Building - Bluffton IN
    The service building was completed by new deal agencies (most likely either the Civilian Conservation Corps or the Works Progress Administration ) in 1936. The style of the building is classified as parks rustic. According to original blueprints, the building originally housed stables, offices, facilities for engine repair, and a hospital.
  • uabache State Park Dam & Lake - Bluffton IN
    The Works Progress Administration (WPA) or Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), possibly both, completed the dam and Lake Kunkal in 1939. The 25 acre lake is impounded by an earthen dam. There are also concrete steps on dam's south face.
  • Wells County Public Library Improvements - Blufton IN
    This neoclassical building was first constructed in 1903, and was redecorated by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the 1930s.