Clark Park

Clark Park
Clark Park
Clarence H. Clark Park[1]
Clark Park, West Philadelphia}}
An August 2007 performance of "Romeo and Juliet" by Shakespeare in Clark Park.
Location West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 39°56′51″N 75°12′36″W / 39.94751°N 75.21004°W / 39.94751; -75.21004Coordinates: 39°56′51″N 75°12′36″W / 39.94751°N 75.21004°W / 39.94751; -75.21004
Area 9.1 acres
Created 1895 (1895)
Operated by City of Philadelphia Parks and Recreation Department
Status Always open
Website http://www.clarkpark.info/ [2]

Clark Park is a municipal park in the Spruce Hill section of West Philadelphia in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Its 9.1 acres (3.7 ha) are bordered by 43rd and 45th streets, and by Baltimore and Woodland Avenues.

The park was established in 1895 on land donated to the city by banker and West Philadelphia developer Clarence Howard Clark, and was known in its early decades as "Clarence H. Clark Park".[1]

Today, the park has a basketball court, playground, an open field, and many paths. It holds a life-sized 1890 sculpture of Charles Dickens by Francis Edwin Elwell,[3] one of just two known statues of the author.[4] It is home to the Shakespeare in Clark Park theatre company.[5]

The park also hosts Philadelphia's largest year-round farmers' market, which runs once or twice a week, depending on the season.[6]

Contents

History

19th century

During the American Civil War, a small portion of the land that would later become Clark Park was occupied by the southern tip of the 16-acre grounds of Satterlee Hospital, one of the largest Union Army hospitals.[7][8] Some 60,000 Union soldiers were treated at the medical facility, which was torn down after the war.[9]

A prominent feature of the park is its "bowl", once a mill pond that powered a paper mill and another mill to the south.[10] An ice house sat near its southern tip.[11] The pond was fed by Mill Creek, which ran through a ravine between 42nd and 43rd Streets, was dammed above Woodland Avenue,[10] and emptied into the Schuylkill River.[7][12]

The mills disappeared in the 1860s.[9] As the area shifted from farmland to residential over the next decades, the dam was removed, the creek was buried to make it easier to build houses, and the pond dried up.

In the 1890s, the land was used as a public dump.

In 1894, a proposal to take the land between 43rd and 44th streets and Baltimore and Chester Avenues for a municipal park was advanced to the City Council. Most of that land was owned by Clarence Howard Clark, a prominent banker and developer who lived a few blocks to the north. The city, which had laid out the streets surrounding the land, had issued a tax assessment of $16,925.25 ($428,211 today[13]) for the work. Clark proposed a deal: he would donate the land for use as a park, and the city would forgive the assessment. Subsequently, a proposed ordinance was sent on April 19 by the council to the Committee on Municipal Government, which on May 10 recommended its passage in this form:

AN ORDINANCE

To place on the public plan for park purposes a plot of ground in the Twenty-seventh Ward, to be known as Clarence H. Clark park.

Section 1. The Select and Common Councils of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Surveys, be, and is hereby authorized and directed to place on the public plan for park purposes that certain lot of ground situate between Forty-third and Forty-fourth streets and Baltimore avenue and Chester avenue, to be called Clarence H. Clark Park : Provided, The owners of property first enter into an agreement satisfactory to the City Solicitor, to dedicate the same to the City on the payment of the amount paid by them for street improvement, sixteen thousand nine hundred and twenty-five (16,925) dollars and thirty-five (35) cents.
—Journal of the Common Council of the City of Philadelphia, Volume 1[14]

The ordinance was passed on June 8, 1894, and the deal was done. In Clark's deed, he restricted the land to be used solely as a park, and he said he wanted the park dedicated to children.[15]

The first portion of the park was dedicated on January 18, 1895.[16] In November 1898, the area south of Chestnut was added, giving the park today's 9.1-acre form.[15]

Dickens and Little Nell

The sculpture of Dickens depicts the 19th-century British author and Little Nell, a character from his novel The Old Curiosity Shop. Created by New York artist Francis Elwell, the grouping was one of the most celebrated American sculptural works of the late 19th century, but by the early 21st century had become somewhat obscure.

It was commissioned in 1890 by Washington Post founder Stilson Hutchins, who wanted it placed in London[17] but subsequently backed out of the deal. Sculptor Elwell completed the work anyway, and had it cast by the Bureau Brothers foundry in Philadelphia,[18] where it won a gold medal from the Art Club of Philadelphia in 1891.[17] The next year, he shipped it to London and put it on display in hopes of finding a buyer, but was unsuccessful, largely because Dickens’ will forbade any "monument, memorial or testimonial, whatever. I rest my claims to remembrance on my published works and to the remembrance of my friends upon their experiences of me."

So Elwell shipped the work back across the Atlantic, and on to Chicago, where it won two gold medals at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1892-93.[19] The New York Times wrote, "Among the art exhibits of this country at the World's Fair, probably no particular example has attracted more popular interest than the sculptural memorial to Charles Dickens, the work of Mr. F. Edwin Elwell, a young artist".[20] But the work failed to find a buyer immediately, and Elwell had it sent back halfway across the country to a Philadelphia warehouse.

In 1896, the Fairmount Park Art Association (FPAA) opened negotiations to buy the work and keep it in Philadelphia, perhaps because "Dickens was twice a visitor here, in 1842 and again 1867, and garnered a following of almost rock star proportions."[21] In 1900, FPAA bought the sculpture for $7,500 ($197,340 today[13]); it was placed in Clark Park the following year. By 1908, the association was receiving, and rebuffing, requests to move it to a more prominent place in the city.[16]

In 1911, the sculpture was mentioned in the Encyclopedia Britannica as one of the city's notable artworks.[22]

20th century

The Gettysburg Stone, a monument to the 60,000 Union soldiers treated at Satterlee Hospital, on whose southern tip the stone was placed in 1916.

In 1915, D. A. Conan, of 1345 Arch St., won a $5,000 contract to lay 3,000 yards of granolithic walkways in the park.[23]

In June 1916, a large stone from Devil's Den at Gettysburg Battlefield was set up in the park to recall the Union soldiers treated on the site and the "services of the patriotic men and women" who cared for them.[15] The stone sits near the park's northwestern corner, which was once the southern tip of the hospital grounds.[7]

In June 1961, the city spent $40,000 ($293,661 today[13]) on park improvements, adding a basketball court, shuffleboard court, checker tables, a tot-lot, two drinking fountains and general landscaping.[15]

The Friends of Clark Park (FOCP), a nonprofit volunteer organization, was founded in 1973 to help maintain the park. Yet the 1970s and ‘80s saw park maintenance steadily decline; no major capital projects were completed except for normal repairs and the installation of playground equipment in the early 1980s.[15] In November 1989, the figure of Little Nell was torn from its pedestal and thrown face-down by vandals. FOCP raised money to do the repairs, which were overseen by the Fairmount Park Art Association, and requested additional lighting to illuminate the sculpture.[16]

By 1998, "Clark Park had long been neglected and desperately needed to be revitalized. Trash and broken glass surrounded the Dickens statue and littered the park. More than once, the neighbors fought the city just to get the grass cut. Lacking lights, the park was off-limits after dusk except to drug dealers and their prey."[24]

That same year, regional farmers began offering produce and other products at the Clark Park Farmers' Market.

21st century

In 2000, FOCP, the Recreation department, and the non-profit University City District organization agreed to raise private maintenance funds to supplement municipal efforts. The agreement launched an annual “Party for the Park” fundraiser, which helps underwrite the cost of landscape maintenance and fund a small, but growing maintenance endowment. Between 2000 and 2006, the trio raised more than $300,000.[16]

The partners sought and received $55,000[15] from the William Penn Foundation to develop a master plan for Clark Park, which was delivered in 2001 after a nine-month effort by community-based steering committee and landscape architects. Among its fruits: a comprehensive assessment of the park’s 305 trees by the Morris Arboretum; two new playgrounds, one of which was built with private funds; and plans to rebuild the basketball court. The master plan also calls for a central plaza where chess players now gather around the flagpole, improvements to the Dickens and Gettysburg Stone areas, and sidewalk and lighting renovations. The plan envisions replacing the parking lot next to the basketball court with green space for the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, which leases the space and the adjacent Rosenberger Hall.[16]

Major renovations to the northern section of the park, dubbed Park A, began September 7, 2010, and were slated to be wrapped up in November. Among the things to be improved are lighting, green areas, paved paths, and drainage.[25] The work was completed on June 16, 2011.[citation needed]

Park events

The farmers’ market operates at 43rd Street and Baltimore, offering produce and other products from regional farms once or twice a week. From May through November, the market is open on Thursdays (3 to 7 p.m.) and Saturdays (10 a.m. to 2 p.m.); the rest of the year, on Saturdays (10 a.m. to 1 p.m.). The market is run by a pair of non-profit organizations: The Food Trust and University City District. Since 2008, the vendors have been equipped with wireless Electronic Benefit Transfer devices set up by the U.S. Department of Agriculture that allow customers to pay with credit and debit cards and food stamps.[6][26]

On February 7, fans of Charles Dickens, led by the Philadelphia branch of the Dickens Fellowship and Friends of Clark Park, meet at the statue to celebrate the writer's birthday.[27]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b JAMA, 1912
  2. ^ The Friends of Clark Park website is the one listed by the City's Parks and Recreation Department.
  3. ^ Philadelphia Public Art page on Clark Park
  4. ^ Malkin, Bonnie (14 March 2011). "Rare Charles Dickens statue restored to Sydney park after 40 years missing". The Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/australiaandthepacific/australia/8308588/Rare-Charles-Dickens-statue-restored-to-Sydney-park-after-40-years-missing.html. Retrieved 2011-03-14. 
  5. ^ Shakespeare in Clark Park
  6. ^ a b Food Matters, a publication of the Food Trust, Fall 2008.
  7. ^ a b c Satterlee Hospital
  8. ^ Map of Satterlee Heights
  9. ^ a b West Philadelphia Streetcar Suburb Historic District, UCHS
  10. ^ a b W. WALLACE WEAVER, WEST PHILADELPHIA: A STUDY OF NATURAL SOCIAL AREAS, 1930
  11. ^ Ellet's 1843 map of Philadelphia
  12. ^ "Studio 34's Eponymous Trolley, or, A Short History of Route 34". Studio 34: Yoga Healing Arts. 2008. http://www.studio34yoga.com/trolley.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-11. 
  13. ^ a b c Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–2008. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  14. ^ Journal of the Common Council of the City of Philadelphia, Volume 1, 1894.
  15. ^ a b c d e f "Clark Park Revitalization Project". Master Plan (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Friends of Clark Park / University City District) (Draft, April 2001): 5. April 2001. http://www.clarkpark.info/Misc%20PDFs/ClarkParkMasterPlanApril2001%20smaller.pdf. Retrieved 2010-09-22. 
  16. ^ a b c d e Byers, Fran; Cynthia Roberts (Spring 2005). "Clark Park: Then and Now". The Quest (Philadelphia: University City District) (Spring 2005): 1. http://www.universitycity.org/_files/pdfs/Quest_spring_05.pdf. Retrieved 2010-09-22. 
  17. ^ a b "Dickens and Little Nell, (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. Smithsonian American Art Museum. http://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!15621!0. Retrieved 2010-09-28. 
  18. ^ Annual report, Issue 42, Fairmount Park Art Association, 1908. The foundry appears to have been located at 21st Street and Allegheny Avenue, according to an 1892 advertisement.
  19. ^ "Dickens and Little Nell (1890)". Fairmont Park Art Association. 2004. http://www.fpaa.org/child/map_63_elw_dic.html. Retrieved 2010-09-22. 
  20. ^ "Dickens and Little Nell". The New York Times. September 17, 1893. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F40B14F83B5F1A738DDDAE0994D1405B8385F0D3. Retrieved 2010-09-23. 
  21. ^ Carreño, Richard (February 18, 2009). "Dickens Disses Philly". Open Salon. http://open.salon.com/blog/richard_carreowriters_clearinghouse/2009/02/18/dickens_disses_philly. Retrieved 2010-09-23. 
  22. ^ Encyclopedia Brittanica 21 (11 ed.) New York: The Encyclopedia Britannica Company 1911 p. 368 http://books.google.com/books?id=xe8tAAAAIAAJ&dq=philadelphia%20%22clark%20park%20%22&pg=PA368#v=onepage&q=%22clark%20park%20%22&f=false. Retrieved 2010-11-04 
  23. ^ Engineering & contracting, Volume 61, Issues 5-6, 1915, by Halbert Powers Gillette
  24. ^ Rodin, Judith (2007). University and Urban Revival. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania. p. 73. http://books.google.com/books?id=zTu27ZvJsmwC&lpg=PA74&dq=clark%20park%20philadelphia&pg=PA73#v=onepage&q=clark%20park%20philadelphia&f=false. Retrieved April 4, 2011. 
  25. ^ "Clark Park renovations begin after delay," Daily Penn, September 8, 2010
  26. ^ USDA's Electronic Benefits Transfer program
  27. ^ History of the Philadelphia Branch of the Dickens Fellowship

External links

Historical maps

SEPTA Subway–Surface Trolley Lines
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