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Revision as of 01:27, 6 June 2007 by TimVickers (talk | contribs) (format disambig link to reduce whitespace)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) See also: Douglas Park (disambiguation)Douglass Park | |
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Type | Municipal |
Location | Chicago, Cook County, Illinois |
Operated by | Chicago Park District |
Status | Open all year |
Douglas Park is a large Chicago Park District park that also serves as a cultural and community center in Chicago, Illinois. Originally named South Park its 173 acres are in the North Lawndale community area of Chicago with an official address of 1401 S. Sacramento Drive. Currently, Chicago's 2016 Olympic bid includes plans to host the Olympic swimming competitions in this park.
History
In 1869, the Illinois state legislature established the West Park Commission, which was responsible for three large parks and interlinking boulevards. Later that year, on November 4 1869 the commissioners named the southernmost park in honor of Stephen A. Douglas (1813-1861). Best remembered for his pre-Civil War presidential defeat by Abraham Lincoln despite superb oratorical skills, Douglas was a United States Senator who helped bring the Illinois Central Railroad to Chicago. In 1871, designer William Le Baron Jenney completed plans for the entire West Park System which included Douglas, Garfield, and Humboldt parks. Jenney's engineering expertise was especially helpful for transforming Douglas Park's poor natural site into parkland. He had manure from the Union Stock Yards and sand added to the marshy site. This process brought the 173 acres of land to grade level. In the center of the landscape, Jenney created a picturesque lake, and a small section of the park was formally opened in 1879. Inflated construction costs and post Great Chicago Fire tax collection difficulties resulted in phased projects. The first improvements were made to the park by Oscar DuBuis in the 1880s.. Between 1886 and 1888 Douglas Park, like the other West Park system parks, replaced its greenhouse with a conservatory. In 1895, members of several German turners' clubs petitioned for an outdoor gymnasium, and the following year one of Chicago's first public facilities was constructed with an outdoor gymnasium (pictured left), swimming pool, and natatorium.
By the turn of the century, the West Park Commission was riddled with political graft, and the three parks became dilapidated. As part of a reform effort in 1905, Jens Jensen was appointed as General Superintendent and Chief Landscape Architect for the entire West Park System. Jensen, now recognized as Dean of the Prairie style of landscape architecture, improved deteriorating sections of the parks and added new features. Among Jensen's improvements were a semi-circular entryway at Marshall Boulevard, and a formal garden at the corner of Ogden Avenue and Sacramento Drive. By the time Jensen designed the garden, Ogden Avenue, a diagonal roadway with a major streetcar thoroughfare, had already been constructed. The road divided the park into two separate landscapes, creating a busy intersection at the junction of Ogden and Sacramento Avenues. Jensen's solution was a long axial garden on the southeast side of the intersection, providing a buffer between Ogden Avenue and playing fields to the south. Jensen demolished the conservatories in each of the West Park System parks in favor of one grand conservatory at Garfield Park.
At the entrance to the garden, the area closest to the busy roadway intersection, Jensen placed a monumental garden shelter, known as Flower Hall, and a formal reflecting pool. The designer of the structure is unknown, however, it was possibly Jensen himself, or his friend, Prairie School architect Hugh Garden. East of the building, the garden becomes more naturalistic. Jensen included perennial beds, a lily pool, and unique Prairie-style benches. In 1928, the West Park Commission constructed a fieldhouse in Douglas Park. The structure was designed by architects Michaelsen and Rognstad, who were also responsible for other notable buildings including the Garfield Park Gold Dome Building, the Humboldt and LaFolette Park Fieldhouses, and the On Leong Chinese Merchant's Association Building in Chinatown. In 1934, Douglas Park became part of the Chicago Park District, when the city's 22 independent park commissions merged into a single citywide agency.
Today
The park has served as a central location for recreation since it was first built. It currently houses a miniature golf course, a beach (actually a shallow lagoon with a sandy bottom), football fields, soccer fields, and an oval running track. The park also retains its original lagoon, a wide variety of trees and the original Jenney designed stone bridge. The greenhouse that attracted visitors from throughout the city was torn down in 1905. The statue of Czech patriot, Karel Havlíček Borovský, by Joseph Strachousky has been moved close to the Adler Planetarium.
Notes
- ^ Graf, John, Chicago's Parks Arcadia Publishing, 2000, p. 11., ISBN 0-7385-0716-4.
- Despite several sources that indicate otherwise and despite the fact that Sacramento Avenue runs at 3000 West from 7558 North to 11258 South it has two sections where it has an alternate official name. It is Sacramento Boulevard from 934 north to 1156 South and it is Sacramento Drive in Douglas Park according to Hayner, Don and Tom McNamee, Streetwise Chicago, "Sacramento Avenue/Sacramento Boulevard/Sacramento Drive", p. 113, Loyola Univerisity Press, 1988, ISBN 0-8294-0597-6
- Hinz, Greg (2007-04-14). "USOC picks Chicago for 2016 Olympic bid". Crain Chicago Business. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Douglas Park Cultural & Community Center". Chicago Park District. 2006. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
- ^ Hueber, Jeff, "Chicago Parks Rediscovered", p. 57, Jannes Art Press, Inc., ISBN 0-912223-02-2.
- Bachrach, Julia Sniderman (2005). "Park Districts". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- ^ Bachrach, Julia Sniderman (2005). "Conservatories". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- ^ Graf, John, Chicago's Parks Arcadia Publishing, 2000, p. 13., ISBN 0-7385-0716-4.
- Graf, John, Chicago's Parks Arcadia Publishing, 2000, p. 12., ISBN 0-7385-0716-4.
- ^ Graf, John, Chicago's Parks Arcadia Publishing, 2000, p. 14., ISBN 0-7385-0716-4.
External links
41°52′N 87°42′W / 41.86°N 87.70°W / 41.86; -87.70