The WPA camp was not in use by 1941, it was owned by the Federal government but operated by the Virginia State Conservation Commission. The local
Lions Club asked the State Conservation Commission to make improvements to the roads and buildings and complete
Rural Electrification Administration hookups in the area. The 4-H Club took over the camp in 1941 and has used and expanded the facility up to the present. The 4-H Club currently leases the camp from the State Department of Forestry. The historic portion of the camp includes 23 contributing buildings, 2 contributing sites, and 1 contributing structure. They include a dining center, 15 cabins and associated cabin site, a girl's bunk house and boy's bunk house, and a covered open-air amphitheater. Much of the historic area of the camp is contained within two natural ridges surrounding a man-made terraced field. ==Significance==