To anyone who gardens, enjoys walking through nature, is conservation-minded or likes to get off of the grid, Frederick Law Olmsted’s name should ring a bell.Often called the “Father of American Landscape Architecture”, he was a titan among those who designed with nature, and an iconoclast during an industrial age that was built upon the grid.With his longtime partner, Calvert Vaux, he designed New York City’s Central Park from 1857 to 1876. He co- designed the Columbian Exposition World’s Fair in Chicago in 1893 with architect Daniel Burnham.He was a vigorous supporter of the conservation of natural areas when land for National Parks was being acquired by the government.He wrote vivid accounts of the antebellum south during the 1850’s, denouncing southern culture.
He left a lasting imprint all over the North America, and especially along Route 1.This trip is meant to give you a look at some of Olmsted’s most famous places, as well as to see those that may inform you about his career and his design principles. It will also take you to places where his design intentions were not fully realized.
A future trip may feature the work of Olmsted’s two sons, Frederick, Jr. and John Charles Olmsted, who continued his Landscape Architecture practice, after Olmsted Sr. became too senile to work in 1895 at age 73.
From the National Zoo website: “In 1889 President Grover Cleveland officially signed an act of congress into law creating the National Zoological Park for “the advancement of science and the instruction and recreation of the people.” Two years later, the animals who had been living on the National Mall had a new home. Frederick Law Olmsted, the premiere architect of the day, designed the Zoo within Rock Creek Park in northwest Washington, D.C., which officially opened in 1891.”
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Pinehurst
What is now “Mecca” for most North American golfers had humble beginnings as a winter retreat in the sandhills of North Carolina.
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Olmsted's plan from 1890
Entrance Bridge to Sudbrook Park, 1890
Entrance bridge in 2022 (Google Maps)
An original home. Image from September, 2022
An original home. Image from September, 2022
Historic Marker near the entrance bridge
Western Maryland RR station in 1890
Western Maryland RR timetable from 1955
Sudbrook Park, Maryland - Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
During the 1850s, James Howard McHenry purchased about 850 acres in Pikesville, MD, just outside of Baltimore, and named it “Sudbrook Estate”. McHenry contracted with… See this View on the map
Cadwalader Park
The City of Trenton purchased the Ellarslie Mansion in the 1880’s, along with about 100 acres of estate land. The Mansion now serves as the Trenton History and Fine Arts Museum. Frederick Law Olmsted was hired by the City to design the park landscape, which prompted the proponents of Trenton to call it “Trenton’s Central Park”, even though it lies well west of the city center.
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Soldiers and Sailors Memorial in Seaside Park
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial in Seaside Park See this View on the map
Seawall at Seaside Park in Bridgeport, CT - Then & Now
Seawall at Seaside Park, Then & Now See this View on the map
First planned in the 1840s, Willowbrook has a who’s who of Westport’s prominent families interred on its grounds. Frederick Law Olmstead was hired in 1876 to finally complete the stalled design for land development.
World famous steamship tycoon Edward Knight Collins (born 1802) won the estate at 18 Elm Street at auction and vacationed there for twenty years. Having built the first American steamships to cross the Atlantic in 1850, Collins became one of the richest men in New York and one of the most important people to have lived in Larchmont.
He added a ballroom (torn down in 1890) and built the two-story front porch. Landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted designed the grounds, which are no longer evident. Because the house was on a small hill with larch trees, Collins named the estate Larchmont.
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The Fens in Boston, MA - October, 2018
The Fens October, 2018 See this View on the map
Downtown Boston from Peter's Hill with Arboretum in foreground
Mountain Laurels in bloom c.1900
Strolling a main trail in 2023
There are close ties with neighbors in Jamaica Plain.
Cool, comfortable and creative ways abound to deepen visitor's knowledge of trees - look inside!
Side trails abound throughout the 281 acres of the Arboretum
Trees are observable in every part of their life cycle
Fall color on a group of maple trees
Visitors Center and administration at Hunnewell Hall, near the main entrance
City map from 1924, showing the Arborway buffering the city and the Arboretum
The Arnold Fortune: How Whale Money Bought Trees on Boston’s Emerald Necklace
If I was a berry-eating robin, I’d be tempted to live at the Arnold Arboretum year-round. Snow storms be damned! Bird food is abundant in… See this View on the map
Central Park
Central Park in 1929, three years after Route 1 was established.
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Peter Evans DC Washington Oct 18, 2022 City Planning Gardens Parks