Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. and Jr.
Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. (1870-1957), who designed 2 of the 3 parks in this system and the Parkway that was created to connect them, was the preeminent American landscape architect of the first half of the twentieth century. His father, Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. (1822-1903), was the preeminent American landscape architect of the second half the nineteenth century.
Among other accomplishments, the father designed or co-designed Central Park, Prospect Park in Brooklyn, Boston’s Emerald Necklace System, the country’s first parks and parkway system, in Buffalo, and parks across the country; he also designed the landscape for the renowned Biltmore Estate in Ashville, North Carolina, between 1888 and 1895, and the celebrated Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1892, sometimes referred to as the “White City” exposition. The elder Olmsted did more than perhaps any other person to define what an American urban park should look like and to establish the notion that in order to be considered a first-rate, progressive city, you needed to have a park like the ones he designed—or better yet, a whole system of them.
Olmsted, Jr., served as an apprentice and helper to his father on the Biltmore and White City projects while still a student at Harvard. Soon after he graduated in 1894, his father retired, and Olmsted, Jr., went into partnership with his elder brother, John Charles Olmsted, to create Olmsted Brothers, which became the country’s leading landscape architecture firm for over a century. Olmsted, Jr., soon inherited his father’s mantle as the leading figure in his field. Among other accomplishments were the following:
- founding member of Harvard’s landscape architecture, the world’s first such program;
- member of two federal commissions that reshaped much of the center of Washington, DC; he also devised the landscape design for the White House grounds, the Jefferson Memorial, and the National Mall;
- led efforts to create the National Parks Service in 1916 and authored the mission statement embedded in the federal law that created it;
- helped to enhance or establish several National Parks, including Yosemite, Acadia, and Everglades, and played a key role in saving the giant redwood trees;
- designed suburban-style neighborhoods, notably Forest Hills Gardens in Queens and Palos Verdes in Los Angeles, as well as 5 in Utica and 1 in Utica’s nearby suburban community of New Hartford.
The Olmsted family park building aesthetic centered on working with or accentuating
the natural contours of the land, hilltop viewing areas offering inspirational vistas, broad meadow-like lawns evocative of the countryside, beautiful water features like ponds, naturalistic plantings (as distinct from beds of showy exotic flowers), minimal buildings, use of rough stone and boulders as construction material, and creating the overall illusion that an intentionally landscaped space was the work of nature.
Among Utica’s parks, Roscoe Conkling best exemplifies this approach to park design; Frederick T. Proctor Park, the last of his Utica parks commissions, incorporated more formal park design features, notably the iconic “Lily Pond,” and some colorful plantings, and this was done to satisfy the desires of his patron, Thomas R. Proctor, who was an admirer of European formal parks despite his years of collaboration with Olmsted on Conkling Park and Utica’s Parkway.