There are twenty buildings constructed out of notched Western Larch logs: a dining hall, 15 sleeping cabins, two bathhouses, and caretaker facilities.[3] Uncut native stone was used for the fireplaces. The camp was ready for the summer season in 1940. However, about 1941–1942 The Boy Scouts moved their camp to Melita Island on Flathead Lake.[2]
The site was used by the United States Forest Service as a smokejumper school for conscientious objectors in the Civilian Public Service Program during World War II.[4][5] This smokejumper program operated from May 1943 to April 1946 under the name "CPS Camp No. 103".[6] It is the only CCC-constructed youth camp in Montana.[7]Campfire Girls, Girl Scouts, Jaycees, 4-H, the Seventh Day Adventist Church,[8] and various civic and religious organizations have used the camp.[2] The Montana Conservation Corps, modeled on the CCC, holds its first week of training here each year.[3] The site became a training camp for the Missoula Children's Theatre in 1995 and now has 15 acres (6.1 ha). It is also used for activities such as family reunions and weddings.[7]
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Chaffin, Mildred (1965). "Camp Paxson Has Experienced Ups, Down". My Forty Years Scribblin's. Retrieved May 27, 2012. – originally written in 1965 and published as a feature article in The Missoulian newspaper