Olmsted's Triumph
One hundred and fifty years ago this month, the New York State legislature set aside the land that would become Central Park. By 1876, landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted and architect Calvert Vaux had transformed the swampy, treeless 50 blocks between Harlem and midtown Manhattan into the first landscaped park in the United States. Here's to New York City's 843-acre backyard!
- By Witold Rybczynski
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Olmsted organized the park’s first concert on July 9, 1859, and public performances, from Souza to Shakespeare to Streisand, are now a tradition. Such events, and the hundreds of movies and TV shows that have used Central Park as a backdrop, have made it as instantly recognizable as the EiffelTower or Big Ben.
What exactly is it that we recognize? Many cities have great parks, but New York’s is the only one that runs smack into an architectural escarpment. This meeting of the natural and the man-made is palpable and oddly poignant. In Ruth Orkin’s view of Sheep Meadow (opposite, top), the buildings protectively hug the misty park. Bruce Davidson catches—it is exactly the right word—four boys skylarking in the lake (below). They splash, whoop and holler as Central Park West’s elegant towers look on. Here is the essence of Central Park—and of American culture: Huck Finn meets Fred Astaire.
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