A Clearing in the Distance: Frederick Law Olmsted and America in the 19th century
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Description:
Author: Witold Rybczynski Paperback
Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) is best remembered today as a
landscape designer, well known for his plans for New York's Central
Park and Prospect Park, the grounds of the U.S. Capitol in Washington,
D.C., and the campus of Stanford University, among other noteworthy
sites. But, writes urban studies professor and accomplished author
Witold Rybczynski, Olmsted was an American original, a 19th-century
success story who packed many careers and wide learning and travel into
a long life. He spent time in China and Europe, managed a California
gold mine, edited The Nation, commanded a medical unit in the
Civil War, and crisscrossed the United States many times over, writing
long reports and articles all the while. (One series of reports urged,
for instance, that the then-remote Yosemite region of California be
made a national park.) Olmsted, Rybczynski suggests, changed the face
of America: he had a vision of the American landscape as a reflection
of the national character, with its broad vistas and open skies, and he
was concerned to make America's urban spaces livable, bringing "trees
and greenery into the congested grid of streets." At Olmsted's urging,
many American and Canadian cities adopted his system of parks, broad
avenues, and greenways, which encouraged the appreciation and
preservation of nature; his influence is felt today in the so-called
urban ecology movement, and in dozens of public spaces across the
continent. Rybczynski's fine and illuminating biography of
Olmsted shows him to have been a man of many parts, an important
historical figure whose legacy remains strong nearly a century after
his death. --Gregory McNamee
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