Frederick Law Olmsted (April
26, 1822 – August 28, 1903) was an American
journalist,
landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture.
Frederick
was famous for designing many well-known urban parks, including
Central
Park
and Prospect Park
in New York City
. Other projects include the country's oldest
coordinated system of public parks and parkways in Buffalo, New
York
; the country's oldest state park, the Niagara
Reservation
in Niagara Falls, New York
; Mount
Royal Park in Montreal
in Canada;
the Emerald Necklace in Boston,
Massachusetts
; the Belle Isle
Park, in Detroit
, Michigan
; the Presque Isle Park in Marquette,
Michigan
; the Grand Necklace of Parks in Milwaukee
, Wisconsin
; the Cherokee Park
and entire parks and parkway system in Louisville,
Kentucky
; the Marquette Park in Chicago
; Jackson
Park
, Washington
Park, and the Midway Plaisance
in Chicago
for the
World's
Columbian Exposition
; the south portion of Chicago
's Boulevard ring (its 'emerald necklace'); the
landscape surrounding the United States
Capitol building; George Washington Vanderbilt
II's Biltmore
Estate
in Asheville
; and Montebello Park in St. Catharines
, Ontario,
Canada
.
Biography
Early life and education
Olmsted
was born in Hartford,
Connecticut
April 26, 1822. His father, John Olmsted, a
prosperous merchant, took a lively interest in nature, people, and
places, which was inherited by both Frederick Law and his younger
brother, John Hull. His mother, Charlotte Law (Hull) Olmsted, died
when he was scarcely four years old. His father remarried in 1827
to Mary Ann Bull, who shared her husband's strong love of nature
and had perhaps a more cultivated taste.
When the
young Olmsted was almost ready to enter Yale College, as a graduate of Phillips
Academy
in 1838, sumac
poisoning weakened his eyes and he gave up college
plans. After working as a seaman, merchant, and
journalist, in January 1848 Olmsted settled on a farm on the south
shore of Staten
Island
which his father helped him acquire.
This farm,
originally named the Akerly Homestead
, was renamed Tosomock Farm
by Olmsted. It was later renamed "The Woods
of Arden" by owner
Erastus Wiman. (The
house in which Olmsted lived still stands today at 4515 Hylan Blvd,
near Woods of Arden Road.)
Career
Olmsted had a significant career in
journalism.
In 1850, he traveled to England
to visit
public gardens, where he was greatly impressed by Joseph Paxton's Birkenhead Park
. He subsequently wrote and published
Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England in 1852.
This supported his getting additional work.
Interested
in the slave economy, he was commissioned by the New York Daily
Times (now The New York
Times) to embark on an extensive research journey through
the American South and Texas
from 1852 to
1857. From the Texas trip, Olmsted wrote his narrative
account published as
A Journey Through Texas (1857). It
was recognized as the work of an astute observer of the land and
lifestyles of Texas. Olmsted believed that
slavery was not only morally odious, but expensive
and economically inefficient.
His dispatches to the
Times were collected into multiple
volumes which remain vivid first-person social documents of the
pre-war South. The last of these,
Journeys and Explorations in
the Cotton Kingdom (1861), was published during the first six
months of the
American Civil War.
It helped inform and galvanize antislavery sentiment in the
Northeast. These three volumes were later condensed and edited as a
single volume.
In 1865, Olmsted cofounded the magazine
The Nation.
Marriage and family
On June 13, 1859, Olmsted married Mary Cleveland (Perkins) Olmsted,
the widow of his brother John (who had died in 1857). He adopted
her three sons (his nephews), among them
John Charles Olmsted. Frederick and
Mary had two children together who survived infancy: a daughter and
a son
Frederick Law Olmsted,
Jr.
New York City's Central Park
Andrew Jackson Downing, the charismatic landscape architect from
Newburgh,
New York
, first proposed the development of New York's
Central Park in his role as publisher of
The
Horticulturist magazine. A friend and mentor to Olmsted,
Downing introduced him to the English-born architect
Calvert Vaux. Downing had brought Vaux from
England as his architect collaborator. After Downing died in July
1852, in a widely publicized steamboat explosion on the
Hudson River, Olmsted and Vaux entered the
Central Park design competition together, against
Egbert Ludovicus Viele among
others.
They were announced as winners in 1858. On his return from the
South, Olmsted began executing their plan almost immediately.
Olmsted
and Vaux continued their informal partnership to design Prospect
Park in Brooklyn
from 1865 to 1873. That was followed by
other projects. Vaux remained in the shadow of Olmsted's grand
public personality and social connections.
The design of Central Park embodies Olmsted's social consciousness
and commitment to egalitarian ideals. Influenced by Downing and his
own observations regarding social class in England, China and the
American South, Olmsted believed that the common green space must
always be equally accessible to all citizens. This principle is now
fundamental to the idea of a "public park", but was not assumed as
necessary then. Olmsted's tenure as park commissioner in New York
was a long struggle to preserve that idea.
Civil War
Olmsted took leave as director of Central Park to work as Executive
Secretary of the
U.S.
Sanitary Commission, a precursor to
the Red
Cross
in Washington, D.C.
. He tended to the wounded during the
American Civil War. In 1862,
during Union General
George B.
McClellan's Peninsula Campaign, Olmsted headed the
medical effort for the sick and wounded at White House in New Kent
County
, where there was a ship landing on the Pamunkey River.
On the home front, Olmsted was one of the six founding members of
the
Union League Club of
New York.
U.S. park designer
In 1863,
he went west to become the manager of the Mariposa
mining estate in the Sierra Nevada mountains in California
. For his early work in Yosemite Valley,
Olmsted
Point
near Tenaya
Lake
is named after him.
In 1865 Vaux and Olmsted formed Olmsted, Vaux and Company.
When
Olmsted returned to New York, he and Vaux designed Prospect Park;
suburban Chicago
's Riverside
; Buffalo, New York
's park system; Milwaukee, Wisconsin
's grand necklace of parks; and the Niagara
Reservation
at Niagara
Falls
.
Olmsted not only created numerous city parks around the country, he
also conceived of entire systems of parks and interconnecting
parkways to connect certain cities to green spaces.
Two of the best
examples of the scale on which Olmsted worked are the park system
designed for Buffalo,
New York
, one of the largest projects; and the system he
designed for Milwaukee, Wisconsin
.
- For a list of Olmsted designed parks in Buffalo, New York,
please see Buffalo, New
York parks system.
Olmsted was a frequent collaborator with
Henry Hobson Richardson, for whom he
devised the landscaping schemes for half a dozen projects,
including Richardson's commission for the Buffalo State
Asylum.
[8527]
In 1883
Olmsted established what is considered to be the first full-time
landscape architecture firm in Brookline, Massachusetts
. He called the home and office compound
Fairsted.
It is now the restored Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic
Site
. From there Olmsted designed Boston's
Emerald Necklace, the campuses of
Stanford
University
and the University of Chicago
, as well as the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago
, among many other projects.
Death and legacy
In 1895,
senility forced Olmsted to retire.
In 1898
he moved to Belmont, Massachusetts
and took up residence as a patient at McLean Hospital, whose grounds he had
designed several years before. He remained there until his
death in 1903.
He was buried in the Old North Cemetery,
Hartford,
Connecticut
.
After Olmsted's retirement and death, his sons
John Charles Olmsted and
Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr.
continued the work of their firm, doing business as the
Olmsted Brothers. The firm lasted until
1980.
A quotation from Olmsted's friend and colleague architect
Daniel Burnham could serve as an epitaph.
Referring to Olmsted in March, 1893, Burnham said, "An artist, he
paints with lakes and wooded slopes; with lawns and banks and
forest covered hills; with mountain sides and ocean views."
Academic campuses designed by Olmsted
Between 1857 and 1895, Olmsted designed numerous school and college
campuses.
From 1895-1950, the
Olmsted
Brothers (his successors) added to some of their father's
initial projects, as well as designing new ones. (See their article
for projects.) Together, these works totaled 355. Some of the most
famous of Frederick Law Olmsted are listed here.
- American University
Main Campus, Washington, D.C.
- Auburn University
Main Campus, Auburn, AL
- Berwick Academy
, South Berwick, ME
(1894)
- Bryn Mawr College
, Bryn
Mawr, PA
(1885)
- University of Chicago
, Chicago,
IL
- Colgate University
, Hamilton, New
York
- Cornell University
, Ithaca,
New York
(1867-73)
- Denison
University, Granville, Ohio

- Fairleigh Dickinson
University
, Madison, New Jersey
- Gallaudet University
, Washington, D.C. (1866)
- Groton School,
Groton,
Massachusetts

- Grove City College
, Grove City, Pennsylvania
- Iowa State University
, Ames,
Iowa
- Lawrenceville School
, Lawrenceville, New Jersey
(1883-1901)
- Manhattanville College, Purchase,
New York

- Miami University
, Oxford,
Ohio
(1912)
- Michigan State University
, East Lansing, Michigan
- Mount Holyoke College
, South Hadley, Massachusetts
- Noble and Greenough School
, Dedham, Massachusetts
- Oregon State University
, Corvallis, Oregon
(1890ss)
- Phillips Academy
, Andover, Massachusetts
(1891-1965)
- Pomfret
School, Pomfret,
Connecticut

- St. Albans
School

- Saint Joseph College,
West
Hartford, Connecticut

- Smith College
, Northampton, Massachusetts
(1891-1909)
- St. Joseph Hill Academy
, Staten Island
, New
York
- Stanford University, Palo Alto,
California
(1886-1914)
- Trinity College
, Hartford, Connecticut
(1872-94)
- University
of California, Berkeley
, Berkeley, California
(1865)
- University of Rochester
, Rochester, New York
- Washington
University
, St. Louis, Missouri
(1865-99)
- Wellesley College
, Wellesley, Massachusetts
- Yale University
, New Haven, Connecticut
(1874-81)
Other notable Olmsted commissions
ABC
- Arnold Arboretum
, Boston, Massachusetts
- Back Bay Fens
, Arborway and Riverway, Boston, Massachusetts
- Beardsley Park
, Bridgeport, Connecticut
, 1884
- Belle Isle
, Detroit, Michigan
, landscaped in the 1880s
- Biltmore Estate
grounds, Asheville, North Carolina
- Branch Brook
Park, Newark,
New Jersey
, 1900 redesign
- Brandywine
Park, Wilmington, Delaware
, 1886
- Brookdale Park, Bloomfield &
Montclair, New Jersey built 1928–1931
- Buffalo, New York
parks system
- Bushnell Park,
Hartford, Connecticut
- Butler
Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island

- Buttonwood
Park, New Bedford, Massachusetts

- Cadwalader
Park, Trenton,
New Jersey

- Carroll Park,
Bay City,
Michigan

- Central Park
, Manhattan
, New
York City
, 1853
(opened in 1856)
- Cherokee Park
, Louisville, Kentucky
- Civic Center Park
, Denver,
Colorado
- Congress Park,
Saratoga
Springs, New York

- Cushing Island, Maine

DEF
- Deering Oaks,
Portland,
ME

- Downing Park
, Newburgh, New York
- Druid Hills, Georgia

- Druid Hill Park
, Baltimore, Maryland
- Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn,
New York

- Elizabeth Park
, Hartford
& West Hartford, Connecticut
- Elm
Park, Worcester, Massachusetts
, perhaps one of his first projects
- Elmwood
Cemetery
, Detroit, Michigan
- Fairmount Park, Riverside,
California

- Florham, former estate of Hamilton and Florence (Vanderbilt)
Twombly. Now the campus of Fairleigh
Dickinson University, Florham Park, New Jersey

- Forest Park
, Queens,
New York
- Fort Greene Park
, Brooklyn, New York
- Fort Tryon Park
, New York City
- Franklin Park, Boston,
Massachusetts
GHI
- Genesee Valley Park
, Rochester, New York
- George Ward
Park, Birmingham, Alabama

- Glen Magna
Farms, Danvers, Massachusetts

- Grand Army Plaza
, Brooklyn, New York
- Highland
Park
, Rochester, New York
- Hubbard Park
, Meriden, Connecticut
- Humboldt Park, Chicago,
Illinois

- The
Institute of Living, Hartford, Connecticut
, 1860s
JKL
- Jackson Park
, originally South Park, Chicago,
Illinois
- Kykuit
Gardens, Rockefeller
family estate, Westchester, New York
, from 1897
- Lake
Park, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

- Lewis and Clark Centennial
Exposition, Portland, Oregon

MNO
- Manor Park
, Larchmont, New York
- Maplewood Park
, Rochester, New York
- Montebello
Park, St.
Catharines
, Ontario
, Canada
[8528]
- Morningside Park
, New York City
- Mount Royal Park, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
, inaugurated in 1876
- Mountain View Cemetery
, Oakland, California
, dedicated in 1865
- Nay Aug Park
, Scranton, Pennsylvania
- New York State Hospital for the
Insane
, Buffalo, New York
- Niagara Reservation (now Niagara
Falls State Park
), Niagara Falls, New York
, dedicated in 1885
- North Park, Fall
River, Massachusetts
(1901)
- Ocean Parkway
, Brooklyn, New York
- Oyster Harbors, Osterville,
Massachusetts
PQRS
- various parks in Portland, Oregon

- Piedmont
Avenue, Berkeley, California
- Pinehurst, NC
, ground broken in 1895
- Presque Isle Park, Marquette, Michigan
- Prospect Park
, Brooklyn, New York, finished 1868
- Public
Pleasure Grounds, San Francisco, California

- River Park (now Riverside Park), Milwaukee,
Wisconsin

- Riverside Drive, New
York City
- Riverside Park
, Manhattan, New York
- Village of
Riverside, Riverside, Illinois

- Ruggles Park
, Fall River, Massachusetts
- Seaside Park
, Bridgeport, Connecticut
, 1860s
- Seneca Park, Rochester, New York
- various parks in Seattle,
Washington

- Shelburne Farms
, Shelbourne, VT
- Smithsonian National Zoological
Park
, Washington, D.C.
- South Mountain Reservation
, Essex County, New Jersey (done by successors, not
by Olmsted senior)
- South Park, (now Kennedy Park), Fall River, Massachusetts
- Sudbrook Park,
Baltimore, Maryland
, 1889
- Swampscott, Massachusetts
- Olmsted Subdivision Historic
District
TUV
- Tyler Park, Lowell,
Massachusetts
. Smallest park Olmsted and associates
designed
- The Rockery,
Easton,
Massachusetts

- United States Capitol
grounds, Washington D.C.
- "the Uplands" residential park, Victoria, BC, Canada, 1907
- Utah State Capitol
grounds masterplan, Salt Lake City, Utah
- Thompson Park, Watertown NY
- Town
of Vandergrift, Pennsylvania
, 1895
- Vanderbilt Mausoleum, New
York City
WXYZ
- Walnut Hill
Park, New Britain, Connecticut

- Washington Park
, Albany, New York
- West
Park Zoological Gardens (now Washington Park), Milwaukee,
Wisconsin

- Woodburn
Circle, West Virginia University
, Morgantown, West Virginia
- Wood Island Park, Boston, Massachusetts (taken by eminent
domain in the 1960s to expand Logan International Airport).
- World's Columbian Exposition
, Chicago, Illinois
, 1893
- World's
End
, formerly the John
Brewer Estate, Hingham, Massachusetts
, 1889
- Whitman Town Park, Whitman,
Massachusetts
, circa 1875
- Wright
Brothers Hill Dayton, Ohio
, 1938-1940
Olmsted in popular culture
In Erik
Larson's The Devil in
the White City, Olmsted is featured as one of the most
important figures participating in the design of the 1893 Chicago
World's
Columbian Exposition
. In the book, his personality and actions
are given significant coverage. In addition, his importance in
designing the fair is highlighted (e.g., his part in picking the
geographic site and his bureaucratic involvement in planning the
fair).
Notes
See also
References
External links