Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation

William E. Carson (1870–1942) was the commission's first (unpaid) chairman and served until resigning pending a reorganization that became effective in late December 1934 and which authorized a full-time state employee to head the agency.

Carson consolidated what under his successor Wilbur C. Hall (1935–1939), became Shenandoah National Park, as well as coordinated with the federal Department of the Interior and Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which created a $5 million system of state parks (in exchange for Virginia appropriations of $100,000 which some called "the biggest bargain of the New Deal").

[2] Also during Carson's chairmanship, Governor John Garland Pollard in 1932 accepted several land parcels in and surrounding Richmond, Virginia, which in March 1936 became Richmond National Battlefield Park after being given to the National Park Service because during the Great Depression the Commonwealth lacked funds to develop and maintain those lands and structures.

[3] Carson also created a Division of History and Archaeology within the State Commission of Conservation and Development and started a historical marker program.

Virginia received the fifth largest state expenditure in the country, totaling $109 million during the agency's nine-year existence.

Douthat Lake at Douthat State Park, one of the original Virginia state parks built by the Civilian Conservation Corps.
A Virginia State Parks Police vehicle at Mason Neck State Park