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During the later
half of the nineteenth century cities in America underwent tremendous
changes. More people were moving to the cities than ever before. It became
evident that cities needed to be transformed into more hospitable places,
and not just centers of commerce. No longer could the leaders of society
or the City fathers sit back and watch the Cities operate. Towards
the end of the 1850s city beautification became an issue that more and
more leaders followed and explored. The theory behind this movement was
that the more aesthetically pleasing you make a city, the more people
will want to live in that city, and the happier they will be.
One of the
greatest champions of the City Beautiful movement was Frederick law Olmsted.
Olmsted was a the leading landscape architect of the post-Civil War generation,
and has long been acknowledged as the founder of American landscape architecture.
Frederick Law
Olmsted (1822 - 1903) was born in Hartford, Connecticut. He was raised
as a gentleman, and while he never fully attended college, he did become
a very learned man. When he was 18, Olmsted moved to New York to begin
a career as a scientific farmer. Soon after that career failed to take
off, he toured Europe with his brother, served as a merchant seaman, and
traveled throughout the southern United States as a newspaper correspondent,
publishing several books as an outgrowth of that career.
Through several connections gained as a columnist with the New Yorker,
Olmsted was able to gain the appointed as the Superintendent of Central
Park, New York City, in 1857, early in the development of that park project.
He soon met Calvert Vaux, who had been working on a design for the park
with Andrew Jackson Downing. When Downing died, Vaux approached OImsted
about collaborating on the project. Their plan, titled Greensward, was
ultimately selected as the winning design.
In 1859, Olmsted married the widow of his brother, John, and he adopted
her children. In 1861, Olmsted obtained a leave of absence from his duties
at Central Park so that he could serve as the Executive Secretary (the
head of administration) of United States Sanitary Commission, an early
version of the Red Cross, which was responsible for aiding the well-being
of the soldiers of the Union Army during the Civil War. In 1863, he was
offered the position manager at the Mariposa Estate in California, a gold
mining venture north of San Francisco, and he left the organization. He
later returned to New York when the project failed, joining Vaux in designing
Prospect Park (1865-1873), Chicago's Riverside subdivision, Buffalo's
park system (1868-1876), and the Niagara Reservation at Niagara Falls
(1887).
In 1883, he
departed New York City and relocated to Brookline, Massachusetts with
his practice. Olmsted had begun work on a park system for the City of
Boston, eventually he focused much of his time on the Emerald Necklace.
This along with his work on the design of the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago
were among the last of Olmsted's projects. In 1895, due to failing health
Olmsted turned the firm over to his partners, and soon senility forced
him to be confined in the McLean Hospital at Waverly, Massachusetts. Ironically,
Olmsted had designed the grounds of the institution.
Frederick Law Olmsted died on August 28, 1903. The landscape architecture
firm he founded was continued by his sons and their successors until 1980.
Subsequently, his home and office were purchased by the National Park
Service and opened to the public as museum. His papers are now housed
in the Library of Congress, while the Olmsted National Historic site preserves
the drawings and plans for much of Olmsted and his firm's body of work.
Works
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