The Park and the People: A History of Central ParkIn this superb and handsomely illustrated book - the first full-scale history of the park ever published - Roy Rosenzweig and Elizabeth Blackmar tell the dramatic story of the creation of Central Park, of the people who built it and have used it. The book chronicles the launching of the park project, the disputes surrounding its design and management, the job of constructing it, and the various ways it has served generations of New Yorkers. Throughout, the authors delineate the politicians, business people, artists, immigrant laborers, and city dwellers who are the key players in the tale. In tracing the park's history, the writers also give us the history of New York. They explain how squabbles over politics, taxes, and real estate development shaped the park and describe the acrimonious debates over what a public park should look like, what facilities it should offer, and how it should accommodate the often incompatible expectations of different groups of parkgoers. The authors have uncovered surprising information about the immigrants and African Americans who were displaced from the park site, and they offer a critical reassessment of the famous collaboration of the park's designers, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux. In rich detail, they describe working-class New Yorkers fighting for Sunday park concerts and against the practice of renting park seats for a nickel. They look back at the origins of the zoo and museums at the park's borders. They follow the battle between the twentieth-century reformers who wanted to introduce playgrounds and ball fields and the preservationists trying to protect the original Olmsted and Vaux design, and they explain the dramatic changes broughtabout by the social impulses of the New Deal and by Robert Moses. Rounding out the story, the authors take in the park's recent history: rising fears of crime in the 1950s, the "be-ins" and anti-war demonstrations of the 1960s, the devastating fiscal crisis of the 1970s, and the restoration of the park in the 1980s by the Central Park Conservancy. But the authors' aim is much wider: they also show that conflicting visions of how a park should be managed and used raise larger issues about the meaning of the "public" in a democratic society. Who is the public? How can people take part in making decisions about public institutions? How do we create public space where people of diverse social and cultural backgrounds will feel welcome? These are questions that communities across the nation will continue to debate. Parkgoers and city dwellers everywhere will be enthusiastic readers of The Park and the People, as will those interested in urban, architectural, social, and cultural history, urban planning, and landscape architecture. |
Contents
Introduction I | 1 |
The Design Competition | 95 |
The Greensward Plan and Its Creators | 121 |
Building for the Public and Posterity | 150 |
Andrew Green and the Model Park | 180 |
The Great Rendezvous of the Polite World | 211 |
The Spoils of the Park | 263 |
Reshaping Park Politics | 284 |
A Public Menagerie and Two Private Museums | 340 |
THE NINETEENTHCENTURY PARK IN | 371 |
Scenes from a Park 19411980 469 995 | 469 |
Whose Park Is It Anyway? | 505 |
Note on Citations | 531 |
Notes | 537 |
611 | |
The Many Sided Fluent Thoroughly American Park | 307 |
Other editions - View all
The Park and the People: A History of Central Park Roy Rosenzweig,Elizabeth Blackmar No preview available - 1992 |
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic American Andrew Green Architecture artistic BCCP BDPP Beekman building Calvert Vaux carriage Central Park century city's civic concerts crowds cultural CV to FLO democratic drives editors Elizabeth Barlow Rogers engineers families Fifth Avenue FLO Mss FLOP Frederick Law Olmsted FYLA gardens Greensward plan Harlem Heckscher Henry Hope Reed History immigrant Irish Jacob Wrey Mould Jones Wood July July 21 June June 24 JWB Mss labor land landowners landscape architects later Manhattan Mayor Minturn Moses museum newspaper Olmsted's park board park commissioner park workers park's parkgoers parks department playgrounds police political proposed public park public space real estate recreation reform Republican reservoir Richard Morris Hunt Robert Robert Moses Seneca Village Sept skating social Society Street Sunday Tammany Trib uptown urban Vaux's visitors wealthy West Side William women working-class New Yorkers York City Yorkers