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Frederick Law Olmsted

Born in Hartford in 1822, Frederick Law Olmsted was the premier landscape architect in the United States during the nineteenth century. After a number of business ventures as businessman, farmer, and journalist, Olmsted became the superintendent and later the architect-in-chief of the Central Park project in New York City, begun in the mid-1850s. Olmsted and Calvert Vaux designed a “Greensward Plan” for Central Park which emphasized curved walkways, picturesque vistas, and natural plantings.

Frederick Law Olmsted. Photo courtesy of Preservation Connecticut

After the Trinity College Board of Trustees had voted in March 1872 to sell the bulk of its original campus property to the state of Connecticut, they searched for a new location to site the college. President Abner Jackson must have contacted Olmsted sometime in spring 1872 to discuss various sites within or near the built-up areas of Hartford. On May 15, 1872, Olmsted wrote and sent a report to Jackson in which he indicated his preferences and prognostications about each of 10 possible sites which Olmsted claimed to have personally visited. He quickly discounted seven of the sites, leaving the Blue Hills, Thrall property, and Rocky Hill as the top three options. Olmsted discussed the bucolic Rocky Hill site (the eventual site chosen by the Trustees), saying that “a neighborhood might soon be established about it in which a suburban character could be permanently maintained at the same time that the advantage of the city would be within convenient reach.” He advised that the College set aside 30 acres for college common and buildings, as well as another 30 acres for “villa residences,” with a stipulation that prevented “the construction upon it of buildings in blocks.” These residences would increase in “market value” and serve as a “stimulus to improvement.” At least one writer to the Hartford Courant in 1873 interpreted Olmsted to be in favor of a site between Farmington and Asylum avenues, but no such clear preference between the three sites can be read from Olmsted's May 1872 report.

Ultimately, the Board of Trustees considered five separate locations which came on the market for purchase by the college.

In mid-May 1875, the Trinity Tablet reported that Frederick Law Olmsted toured the “new college site” with recently-installed Trinity College President, Thomas Pynchon. Two months later, on July 1, 1875, the ground-breaking ceremony which initiated the new Trinity College campus occurred on Rocky Ridge (later known as the Summit campus).

The Trinity Tablet attributed the planting of several rows of “young trees and evergreens” to Olmsted. During the 1870s, while advising the College about its new site, Olmsted had suggested the Blue Hills location for the new campus. But Trinity’s leaders chose the Rocky Ridge instead. Contrary to popular belief, there were no drawings or other evidence to show that Olmsted “designed the landscape” inside the Main Quad.

In the 1890s, Olmsted was contracted to design a park-like area west of the Long Walk, extending along Summit Street in the area used as a quarry by the city of Hartford. Some of the Olmsted firm’s designs for this area are implemented there.

After his death in 1903, Olmsted was buried at Old North Cemetery in Hartford.


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olmsted_frederick_law.1689618178.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/07/17 18:22 by bant05