Tower Grove Park is a municipal park in St. Louis, Missouri. Located on the south side of the city, the elongated 289-acre (117 ha) park extends 1.6 miles (2.6 km) from Kingshighway Boulevard east to Grand Boulevard. The park’s predominately residential surroundings include the neighborhoods of Southwest Garden, Shaw, Tower Grove East, and Tower Grove South.
Tower Grove Park | |
Location | St. Louis, Missouri |
---|---|
Coordinates | 38°36′22″N 90°15′22″W / 38.606°N 90.256°W |
Area | 289 acres (117 ha) |
Built | 1889 |
Architect | James Gurney Sr., George I. Barnett |
Architectural style | Greek Revival, Gothic |
NRHP reference No. | 72001556[1] |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | March 17, 1972 |
Designated NHLD | December 20, 1989[2] |
Both Tower Grove Park and the neighboring Missouri Botanical Garden were part of the estate of 19th-century businessman and botanist Henry Shaw. In 1868, Shaw donated the land for the park to the city of St. Louis.
History
editTower Grove Park was originally part of La Petite Prairie, which was settled by the French in the early 18th century. Grazing land was held in common, and farming land was divided into long, narrow tracts. The commons system was abandoned around 1800, and the land began to be sold into private hands. By the 1850s much of the property was owned by German Catholics, recent immigrants from Germany's 1848 civil war. The German dairy farmers found it ideal as pasture land. They built comfortable homes and began creating a community toward the end of the 19th century. Blocks were developed, upon which many of the prosperous German immigrants, turned American citizens, built grand homes. The area around the park continues to be home to a number of residential neighborhoods.
Henry Shaw donated the land for the park in 1868, and the park opened to the public in 1872.[3]
Environment and facilities
editThe park features 32 pavilions of picturesque design, most dating from the Victorian era. The landscape includes a lily pond and formal plantings; the Piper Palm House, a bandstand, the site of music and other special events; as well as tennis courts; a wading pool for small children; open expanses of green; softball diamonds and soccer fields; paths for walkers, joggers, and cyclists, and tall specimen trees and a great variety of bushes. Designed in the gardenesque style by James Gurney Sr., the park has been designated a National Historic Landmark as one of the nation's finest examples of a late 19th-century public park. Gurney had been head of the aquatic plants section at Kew Gardens in London, and he remained in St. Louis as superintendent of the park.[4]
The park is home to nearly 400 species of trees, bushes, and flowering plants. It is a well-known birdwatching area, particularly during the spring and fall bird migration seasons. It is part of the Mississippi Flyway and migrating birds rest in the park along their journey. Forty percent of North American songbirds and waterbirds use this route. Examples are many types of warblers, orioles, and Canada geese.[citation needed]
Statues
editThere are several statues from the 1800s along the central corridor of the park. There is a full likeness of Alexander von Humboldt, the German naturalist, geographer and explorer, and one of William Shakespeare the English playwright, both from 1878 and sculpted by German sculptor Ferdinand Freiherr von Miller.[5] von Miller also produced a statue of the Italian navigator and explorer Christopher Columbus that was dedicated in 1886, and placed near the gates and entrance from Grand Avenue.
The Christopher Columbus statue had been annually commemorated by the local Italian American community. In 2016 and 2017, the statue was vandalized with red paint and messages including "murderer" and "Black Lives Matter." Calls for the statue's removal in 2018 initiated forming a commission to make recommendations on the statue's future.[6] The Columbus statue was removed from the park in June 2020.[7]
Around the bandstand there are white marble busts of some famous musical composers mounted on columns. Mozart and Rossini by Howard Kretschmar from 1882, Beethoven and Wagner by Ferdinand von Miller from 1884, and Gounod and Verdi by Carlo Nicoli from 1886.
There is a smaller scale statue of Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, the German born military officer and American Revolution volunteer, near the Palm house. Steuben later became an American citizen and figure to German Americans. The original, larger statue (by the German sculptor Cuno von Uechtritz-Steinkirch) was commissioned for the 1904 World's Fair. The current version was placed in Tower Grove Park in 1968.
Two zinc statues of stags, en couchant and on pedestals, face each other across Center Cross Drive, just west of the Piper Palm House.
Events
editMany events, from picnics to weddings, are held in the park throughout the year. During the summer, a number of large festivals are held in the park, including ones featuring themes such as international culture and paganism.[8] The park has also been the site of various LGBTQ Pride festivals.
Since 2005, from May through October, a farmers' market is held from 8-12:30 Saturday mornings just west of the Wading Pool Pavilion. It features local and organic farmers offering fresh produce and meats, baked goods and preserves, as well as prepared foods and drinks, teas and coffees, with stalls for craftsmen and artisans as well.
Photos of pavilions
edit-
Turkish Pavilion
-
Bandstand in Tower Grove Park
-
Chinese Pavilion
-
Sons of Rest Pavilion
See also
edit- Forest Park, the largest park in the city, located to the northwest, and site of the 1904 World's Fair
- Gazebo
- Lafayette Park, the first public park west of the Mississippi, in the old city to the northeast
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Missouri
- National Register of Historic Places listings in St. Louis south and west of downtown
References
edit- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
- ^ "Tower Grove Park". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved June 28, 2008.
- ^ "Tower Grove Park". Library of American Landscape History | LALH. Archived from the original on November 13, 2024. Retrieved November 13, 2024.
- ^ "NHL nomination for Tower Grove Park" (PDF). Missouri DNR. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
- ^ Andreas W. Daum, "Celebrating Humanism in St. Louis: The Origins of the Humboldt Statue in Tower Grove Park, 1859‒1878." Gateway Heritage: Quarterly Magazine of the Missouri Historical Society (Fall 1994), 48-58.
- ^ Bott, Celeste. "First a Confederate statue came down in St. Louis. Is the Christopher Columbus monument next?". stltoday.com. Retrieved August 30, 2018.
- ^ "Columbus statue taken down in Tower Grove Park in St. Louis". June 17, 2020.
- ^ "Home". pridestl.org.
- "National Register of Historic Places - Nomination Form" (PDF). Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved May 30, 2008.
- MacAdam, David H. (1883). Tower Grove Park of the City of St. Louis. R. P. Studley & Co., Printers. OCLC 5078275. Retrieved October 17, 2008.
Master Plan of Tower Grove Park, 1985 by Eldridge Lovelace
External links
edit- Tower Grove Park, Official Website
- Missouri Botanical Garden, Official Website