"The present situation in regard to the national parks is very
bad. They have been created one at a time by acts of Congress which have
not defined at all clearly the purposes for which the lands were to be
set apart, nor provided any orderly or efficient means of safeguarding
the parks . . . I have made at different times two suggestions, one of
which was . . . a definition of the purposes for which the national
parks and monuments are to be administered by the Bureau." (Letter
from Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., to the president of the Appalachian
Mountain Club, January 19, 1912.)
Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., was approached by the American Civic
Association in 1910 for advice on the creation of a new bureau of
national parks. This initiated six years of correspondence and his key
contribution of a few simple words that would guide conservation in
America for generations to come: "To conserve the scenery and the
natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide
for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will
leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."
(National Park Service Organic Act, 1916)
Olmsted, Jr., began his career as his father's apprentice on two
famous projects: the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and
the George Vanderbilt estate, "Biltmore," in North Carolina. He became a
partner in his father's Brookline, Massachusetts, landscape architecture
firm in 1895, and with Olmsted Sr.'s retirement, quickly took over
leadership with his stepbrother, John Charles Olmsted, For the next
half-century, the Olmsted brothers' firm completed thousands of
landscape projects nationwide. Olmsted, Jr., was appointed by the Senate
Committee on the District of Columbia in 1901 to help update the
L'Enfant plan for Washington, D.C. By 1920 his better-known projects
included plans for metropolitan park systems and greenways across the
country; in 1929 he developed the guiding plan for California's state
park system. Olmsted, Jr., also established the first formal training in
landscape architecture at Harvard in 1900 and was a founding member and
later president of the American Society of Landscape Architects.
Olmsted, Jr., had a lifetime commitment to national parks. He worked
on projects in Acadia, Everglades, and Yosemite. A partial listing of
his design projects in the nation's capital reads like a guide to the
NPS-managed sites of Washington, D.C., including the Mall, Jefferson
Memorial, White House grounds, and Rock Creek Park. In his later years,
Olmsted, Jr., actively worked for the protection of California's coastal
redwoods. Redwood National Park's Olmsted Grove was dedicated in 1953 to
the man whose contributions to protect America's system of national
parks will forever stand as tall as those magnificent trees.