Parks 1

 


PIATT  PARK

Garfield Pk BEV.jpg (767460 bytes) Not postcards Garfield Monument.jpg (167831 bytes)
Bird's eye view                                                                       

  This small (.84 acres) park is the city's oldest. On April 9, 1817 the Piatt brothers, John (1781-1822) and Benjamin (1799-1863), gave this land to the city for a market place. Because there were other markets nearby, the land was developed into a park. Situated in the middle of Eighth Street between Vine and Elm it was called Eighth Street Park and was dedicated on June 18, 1868. In 1882 a year after the death of President James A. Garfield, (from Ohio), by an assassin the park was renamed Garfield Park. It was not until October 20, 1940 was it again rededicated in honor of the Piatts.
  On December 1, 1887 a statue of President Garfield was unveiled in the middle of the intersection of Eighth and Race Street facing Cincinnati (south). Of course by the early twentieth century it had become a nuisance for downtown traffic. On January 14, 1915 it was moved to the western end of the park at Elm Street. It was again moved to its present position on the Vine Streets end in 1988.

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Real photo postcard

 

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                                             Real Photo PC

 

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Garfield and Harrison statues

 

     William Henry Harrison married the daughter of John Cleves Symmes and moved to North Bend. During the war of 1812 Harrison commanded the Army of the Northwest and emerged a national hero. In 1840 Harrison became the ninth President of the United States and the first elected from Ohio. One month after taking office he died of pneumonia. He is buried in North Bend beneath an imposing monument. This statue of Harrison was sculpted by an instructor at the Art Academy, Louis T. Rebisso. Strangely Harrison, in full battle regalia, is shown without a saddle! No One knows what holds the stirrups up. Dedicated on June 25, 1895 at the eastern end of the park at Vine Street. It, like Garfield's statue, was moved in 1988 to its present position on western end of the park at Elm Street. (confusing isn't it?)

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                                                                                                 From top of Library

 

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Five views of the park 

   A little piece of trivia I learned on my tour of some of the Civil War battle sites. Whenever you see a monument of a soldier sitting on a horse, if the horse has one leg raised the man was wounded in battle, if the horse has both front feet reared up the soldier was killed in battle. Harrison had been wounded in the Indian wars. The last card above was just recently discovered as mistakenly being placed on the Kentucky website. It is one of several cards that were misprinted in Germany for the Metropolitan News Company with Covington, Ky. instead of Cincinnati, Oh.

 

WASHINGTON  PARK

  Washington Park is located across the street from the Music Hall, bounded by Elm, Race, 12th and 14th streets, it comprises 4.9 acres. Up until 1855 this area was a cemetery. Public health officials feared "miasmas"-vapors that were thought to rise from corpses-might be responsible for many of the urban health problems. So the city bought the land and reinterred the bodies in Spring Grove Cemetery.
  The park opened in 1861. There are two granite busts in the park. Friedrich Hecker (1811-1881) was a refugee from the German revolution of 1848. He founded the first Turner society in the United States, (see Turners page). Hecker was a brigadier general in the Union army. The other memorial is of Robert McCook (1827-1862). He was a colonel in the Union army who led the all German 9th Ohio Volunteer Infantry from Cincinnati. He was killed during the war. These memorials were erected in 1883 and 1878 respectively. The cannon you see is from the Civil War fleet of admiral David G. Farragut.

           
Friedrich Hecker                    Robert McCook  

 

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Day scene            and           Night scene                                                

 

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BURNET  WOODS

  This park is located north of the University of Cincinnati, south of Ludlow Ave., east of Clifton Ave., and west of Jefferson Ave. Consisting now of about 91 acres, it opened on August 26, 1874. The park originally consisted of about 165 acres but the University of Cincinnati was built on the southern portion of the park and later additions took over even more of the park.
  The first two cards show the bandstand where the very popular band concerts were given on Thursday evenings during the summer. Community sings where everyone joined in were also given. The building you see in the next few cards was a shelter house. The small man-made lake was built in 1875, it had rowboats that could be rented for 50 cents an hour, there was also a motor launch that would take you around the pond for a nickel. In 1936, 12,000 people attended a Federal Music Project production of "H. M. S. Pinafore," that was on a stage that was floating on pontoons in the lake. The Trailside Museum and Nature Center, north of the lake, were constructed in the early 40s.

                

 

               

 

                

 

                 
                                                                                                         Same card-different interpretation

 

               

 

                   
Same Image                                                                                     Same Image

 

    

 

                               
They not only took out the poles in the last card-they must have run off the girl standing in front.

 

                                             
                                               Children's Home Outing                    RPPC  Unknown Group                    RPPC  7/04/1911  Outing 

 

               
Two newer cards

 


Digg's Fountain Plaza

   The fountain is located at the northwest corner of the park. Information on the fountain is extremely thin. Can any one help?

 

 

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