Olmsted, Frederick Law

Olmsted, Frederick Law
born April 26, 1822, Hartford, Conn., U.S.
died Aug. 28, 1903, Brookline, Mass.

U.S. landscape architect.

He traveled throughout the American South in the 1850s and won fame for several books describing its slaveholding culture. During an extended vacation in Europe, he became profoundly impressed with English landscaping, which he described in Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England (1852). In 1857 he was hired as superintendent of New York City's newly planned Central Park. With the architect Calvert Vaux (1824–95), he won a competition to design the park, and he became its chief architect in 1858. The result was a nature-lover's paradise incorporating lawns, woods, ponds, and meandering paths; it represented one of the first attempts in the U.S. to apply art to the improvement of nature in a public park. Other Olmsted parks include Prospect Park in Brooklyn, New York City; a Niagara Falls, N.Y., park project; an extensive system of parks and parkways in Boston; and the World's Columbian Exposition (later Jackson Park) in Chicago. As chairman of the first Yosemite commission, he helped secure the area as a permanent public park.

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▪ American landscape architect
born April 26, 1822, Hartford, Conn., U.S.
died Aug. 28, 1903, Brookline, Mass.
 American landscape architect who designed a succession of outstanding public parks, beginning with Central Park in New York City.

      At the age of 14, sumac poisoning seriously affected Olmsted's eyesight and limited his education. As an apprentice topographic engineer for a brief period, he received the fundamental skills needed for his later career. In 1842 and 1847, his sight having improved, Olmsted attended lectures in science and engineering at Yale University. For a time he was interested in scientific farming, which he studied under George Geddes, who had a well-known model farm at Owego, N.Y. During an extensive holiday in Europe, Olmsted was profoundly impressed with English landscaping and wrote about his observations in Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England (1852).

      Olmsted's open opposition to slavery led the editor of The New York Times to send him to the American South from 1852 to 1855 to report weekly on how slavery affected the region's economy. His report, published as The Cotton Kingdom (1861), is regarded as a reliable account of the antebellum South. In 1857 Olmsted was appointed superintendent of New York City's projected Central Park. A competition was held to select a new plan for the park, and Olmsted collaborated with the young British architect Calvert Vaux in developing the successful design. In 1858 he became chief architect of the park and from then until 1861 worked assiduously in one of the first attempts in the United States to apply art to the improvement of nature in a public park. The work attracted widespread attention, with the result that he was engaged thereafter in most of the important works of a similar nature in the United States: Prospect Park, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Fairmont Park, Philadelphia; Riverside and Morningside parks, New York City; Belle Isle Park, Detroit, Mich.; the grounds surrounding the Capitol at Washington, D.C., between 1874 and 1895; Stanford University at Palo Alto, Calif.; and many others. He also designed Mount Royal Park, Montreal.

      From 1864 to 1890 Olmsted chaired the first Yosemite (Yosemite National Park) commission, taking charge of the property for California and succeeding in preserving the area as a permanent public park. Plans for the Niagara Falls park project, among the last in which Olmsted and Vaux collaborated, did much to influence New York state to preserve the Niagara reservation.

      After 1886 Olmsted was largely occupied in laying out an extensive system of parks and parkways for the city of Boston and the town of Brookline, Mass., and in working on a landscape improvement scheme for Boston Harbor. He was commissioned in 1888 to design the grounds for Biltmore, the estate of George W. Vanderbilt (grandson of the railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt (Vanderbilt, Cornelius)) near Asheville, N.C. It was one of Olmsted's last great efforts in the picturesque style. In the late 1880s, when the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition was being planned for 1893, Olmsted was chosen to head the landscape project, which he later redesigned as Jackson Park. He spent his last years mainly at his home in Brookline.

Additional Reading
Studies of his life and achievements include Laura Wood Roper, FLO: A Biography of Frederick Law Olmsted (1973, reissued 1983); Elizabeth Stevenson, Park Maker: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted (1977); Bruce Kelly, Gail Travis Guillet, and Mary Ellen W. Hern, Art of the Olmsted Landscape (1981); John Emerson Todd, Frederick Law Olmsted (1982); and Melvin Kalfus, Frederick Law Olmsted: The Passion of a Public Artist (1990).

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  • Olmsted,Frederick Law — Olm·sted (ōmʹstĕd , stĭd), Frederick Law. 1822 1903. American landscape architect who was the chief designer of Central Park in New York City (1858 1861). * * * …   Universalium

  • Olmsted, Frederick Law — (26 abr. 1822, Hartford, Conn., EE.UU.–28 ago. 1903, Brookline, Mass.). Paisajista estadounidense. Viajó por el sur de EE.UU. en la década de 1850 y ganó fama por varios libros que describen su postura en favor de la esclavitud. Durante unas… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Frederick Law Olmsted — Sr. Born April 26, 1822(1822 04 26)[1] Hartford, Connecticut Died …   Wikipedia

  • Frederick Law Olmsted — Nacimiento 26 de abril de 1822 Island, Nueva York …   Wikipedia Español

  • Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. — Infobox Architect name=Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr mother=Mary Cleveland Perkins father=Frederick Law Olmsted nationality=American birth date=birth date|1870|7|24 birth place=Staten Island, New York death date=death date and… …   Wikipedia

  • Frederick Law Olmsted — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Olmsted. Portrait de Frederick Law Olmsted par John Singer Sargent, huile sur toile, 1895. Frederick Law Olmsted (26  …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Olmsted. Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. (24 07 1870 – 25 12 1957) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Frederick Law Olmsted — (Maler: John Singer Sargent, 1895) Frederick Law Olmsted (* 26. April 1822 in Hartford, Connecticut; † 28. August 1903 in Belmont, Massachusetts) war ein Landschaftsarchitekt aus den USA und bekannt für seine Planung des New Yorker …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site — Infobox Protected area name = Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site iucn category = caption = locator x = 265 locator y = 50 location = Brookline, Massachusetts, USA nearest city = Boston, Massachusetts lat degrees = 42 lat minutes = 19… …   Wikipedia

  • Frederick Law Olmsted — noun United States landscape architect primarily responsible for the design of Central Park in New York City (1822 1903) • Syn: ↑Olmsted • Instance Hypernyms: ↑landscape architect, ↑landscape gardener, ↑landscaper, ↑landscapist …   Useful english dictionary

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