'Samuel H. Parsons Jr.' (
1844 -
February 23,
1923). Parsons was a well-known American landscape architect remembered primarily for his "Beaux-Arts designs in
New York City, the development of
Central Park, San Diego’s
City Park, and for serving as a founding member to the
American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA).
His Life
Samuel Parsons was born in
New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1844 to Samuel Parsons Sr., an accomplished, and well noted,
horticulturist. Samuel received his practical training and knowledge of
landscaping and landscape materials working for J.R. Trumpy, the manager of his father’s nursery in
Flushing, Queens. Parsons then went to school at
Yale University and graduated with a
degree in
philosophy in 1862, and after he spent a few years as a farmer, he returned home the family nursery and found a welcome surprise. The nursery was now collaborating with and supplying
Frederick Law Olmsted and
Calvert Vaux, two famous designers most notably responsible for New York’s
Central Park design.
Before long, Parsons was an
associate of
Calvert Vaux, and gained the title Superintendent of Planting for the
New York City Parks Department. Years later, in 1898 (three years after the death of his former partner
Calvert Vaux), Parsons became the head
landscape architect for
New York City and remained so until 1911. During Parsons partnership with
Vaux, the two produced of many notable designs, including: Abingdon Square, the remedy of the Ladies Pond in
Central Park, the siting of
Grant's Tomb, and
Morningside Park. In collaboration with architect
Stanford White, both Parsons and Vaux produced the Washington Memorial Arch in
Washington Square Park and the Grand Army Plaza Arch in
Prospect Park in
Brooklyn.
After Vaux’s death, Parsons went on to design
Balboa Park (then known as
City Park) in
San Diego, Albemarle Park in
Ashville, North Carolina,
St. Nicholas Park in New York City, as well as the re-design of
Union Square to accommodate the
subway.
In 1899, Parsons also founded the
American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) in conjunction with 10 other
landscape architects on a basis of three
tenets:
#To establish
landscape architecture as a recognized
profession in
North America.
#To develop educational studies in
landscape architecture.
#To provide a
voice of authority in the "New Profession".
From 1906 to 1907 Parsons served as the
President of the American Society of Landscape Architects.
Throughout his professional
career, Parsons was known for his ability to merge elegant plantings and the extensive knowledge he had gained from his father with the native environment without disrupting the Genus Loci (the spirit of place) of the sites he designed. He remains a
founding father of the modern day
landscape architecture institution, and his designs are still visible throughout the
United States, primarily in Sand Diego’s
Balboa Park and New York City's
Union Square.
Notable Designs
★
Abingdon Square Park, New York City
★
The Ladies Pond in Central Park, New York, New York
★
Morningside Park, New York, City
★
Washington Memorial Arch in
Washington Square Park, New York
★ the
Grand Army Plaza Arch in Prospect Park, Brooklyn
★
Balboa Park,
San Diego, California
★
Albemarle Park, Ashville, North Carolina
★
St. Nicholas Park,
New York City
★
Union Square, New York City
See also
★
Landscape architecture
★
History of gardening
★
Garden real estate
★
Landscape Design
★
Calvert Vaux
★
Frederick Law Olmsted
References
★
Samuel Parsons Finds Xanadu in San Diego, , Richard W., Amero, The Journal of San Diego History,
★
ART; A Landscape Artist Who Left His Mark vivian Raynor
American Architect's Biographies
American Society of Landscape Architects
External links
★
American Society of Landscape Architects
★
Art; A Landscape Artist who left his mark.
★
The Journal of San Diego History