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I
CHRONOLOGY OF
FREDERICK LAW OLMSTED

1874–1882

1874
January Olmsted inspects U.S. Capitol Grounds
February 17 Committee on Legislation of New York City Department of Public Parks organized to lobby against legislation to authorize the Department of Public Works to construct Riverside Avenue.
March Olmsted offers to make general plan of the U.S. Capitol grounds for $1,500 plus expenses: accepted by the committee on public grounds and buildings
April Olmsted provides plan and report for grounds of U.S. Hotel in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
May 9 Henry Stebbins elected president of New York City Board of Commissioners of Department of Public Parks
May 14 Olmsted’s report to Montgomery Meigs on Jeffersonville Depot, Indiana
June 9 Olmsted submits “Skeleton Plan” for U.S. Capitol grounds
July 8 Olmsted agrees to assist Charles S. Sargent in making the Arnold Arboretum part of the Boston park system
September 28 Olmsted’s plan for U.S. Capitol approved by Justin Morrill, Edward Clark, and O. E. Babcock
November William H. Wickham of Tammany Hall elected mayor of New York City; Samuel Tilden elected governor of New York State, William Dorsheimer elected lieutenant governor
November 21 Olmsted submits report on park for Mount Royal, Montreal
December 5 Olmsted’s article “The National Capitol” published in New York Daily Tribune
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December 15 Olmsted submits plan for the improvement of Niagara Square, Buffalo
1875
Olmsted and engineer George Kent Radford draw up plans for Parkside subdivision next to Delaware Park, Buffalo
January 5 William R. Martin appointed to New York City park board
January 15 Olmsted presents report on Riverside Avenue and Park to New York City park board
January 20 New York City park board adopts Olmsted’s Riverside Park and Avenue plan
March 3 Congress approves Olmsted plans for U.S. Capitol grounds and terraces
March 5 Henry Koster suspended as captain of Central Park Keepers
c. March 16 Olmsted revises plan of Riverside Park and Avenue, adding bridle path to promenade section
March 19 Olmsted regains control over Central Park labor force
May Report to New York legislature by Senate Finance Committee criticizing cost and construction of New Capitol
June 1 Olmsted submits report and plans for Schuylkill Arsenal, Philadelphia
June New Capitol Commission created by New York state legislature, with William Dorsheimer as chairman
July 15 Appointment of the New Capitol advisory board of Olmsted, Richardson and Eidlitz
September 6 New York City park board reinstates Olmsted’s plan of organization for gardeners on Central Park
Fall John C. Olmsted begins work as draftsman and apprentice
October 7 Olmsted submits plan for Mount Royal approach roads
October 26 Olmsted examines sites being considered for Boston parks
November Olmsted corresponds with Thomas Hill on landscaping of railroad through Crawford Notch in the White Mountains
November 5 Olmsted and engineer J. J. R. Croes are authorized to plan street and rapid transit systems for 23rd and 24th wards of New York City (the Bronx)
Winter 1875–76 Construction of road up Mount Royal
1876
January 1 Olmsted submits plans and report for Buffalo City Hall
February 28 Olmsted submits plan for laying out summer community at Chautauqua Point on Lake Chautauqua, New York
March-April Bill to create one-commissioner New York City park board before NY legislature: fails of passage
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March 2 Report of the advisory board to the New York State New Capitol Commission
March 11 Plans of advisory board for the New Capitol published in American Architect and Building News
March 23 $70,000 error in accounts of New York Department of Public Parks discovered—construction staff laid off
March 29 Remonstrance of New York Chapter of AIA against plans of advisory board for the New Capitol
March 31-April 2 Olmsted makes a two-day inspection of proposed Boston park sites
April 8 Olmsted submits report on proposed sites for Boston parks
May 6 William R. Martin elected president of New York City park board
May 31 New York State Survey Commission meets with Olmsted as member
June Plans for the New Capitol by advisory board approved
June 14 City Comptroller Andrew H. Green withholds Olmsted’s salary as landscape architect of the Department of Public Parks because of his appointment to State Survey Commission
July 1 Thomas Fuller dismissed as Resident Architect of New Capitol
July Olmsted plans reservoir and formal promenade in Glades section of Mount Royal
August 4 Olmsted is reinstated as landscape architect to Department of Public Parks
August 9 Olmsted submits report on improvements for Tompkins Square New York City
August 10 Olmsted resigns from State Survey Commission
September 1 Olmsted, Eidlitz and Richardson officially replace Fuller as architects of the New Capitol
September 12 Firm of Eidlitz, Richardson & Co., with Olmsted as treasurer, is formed to facilitate work on the New Capitol
November 4 Presidential Election: uncertainty of outcome lasts until March 1877; in New York State, Lucius Robinson elected governor, William Dorsheimer lieutenant governor
November 15 First report by Olmsted and J. J. R. Croes to New York City park board on 23rd and 24th wards (the Bronx)
November 21 Report and plan by Olmsted and Croes for 24th Ward west of Riverdale Road
November 22 New York City park board appoints James C. Aldrich superintending engineer of Riverside Avenue project
December 7 John Kelly replaces Andrew H. Green as Controller of New York City
December 23 Olmsted submits report on grounds of Washington Monument, Baltimore
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1877
January-March With Thomas Wisedell, Olmsted prepares revised plans for squares north and south of Washington Monument, Baltimore
January New remonstrance against plans for New Capitol of Eidlitz, Richardson & Co. submitted to state legislature by numerous citizens; joint committee of legislature begins hearings
February 28 Submittal by Olmsted and Croes of plan for section of 23rd and 24th wards between Riverdale Road and Broadway
February 28 Group of architects testify before the joint committee against plans for New Capitol of Eidlitz, Richardson and Co.: they include George B. Post, Richard Morris Hunt, Napoleon Le Brun, Henry Dudley, and Detlef Lienau
March 6 Olmsted presents his testimony on plans for the New Capitol to joint committee of New York State legislature
March 20 Olmsted and Croes submit report and plan for steam transit routes for 23rd and 24th Wards
March 26 Olmsted prepares counter-remonstrance concerning the New Capitol
April 11 Olmsted and Croes submit report for district of 23rd and 24th wards west of Jerome Avenue
April 25 New York legislature directs that the New Capitol is to be completed in the original “Italian Renaissance” style employed by Thomas Fuller
May 15 Unveiling of Fitz-Greene Halleck monument in Central Park
June 20 Olmsted and Croes submit plans for Central and Hunt’s Point districts of 23rd and 24th wards
July Railroad strikes isolate New York City for several days
September 28–29 Olmsted presents two lectures in Montreal on his plan for Mount Royal
c. October Olmsted suffers break-down in his health
October 31 Olmsted and Croes submit report for Central District of the 23rd and 24th wards
December 12 New York City controller John Kelly withholds Olmsted’s salary
December 26 New York park board grants Olmsted three-month leave of absence for reasons of health
1878
January 5 New York park board resolves to discontinue Bureau of Design and Superintendence, abolishes its offices, and appoints Olmsted Consulting Landscape Architect
January 8 Olmsted sails to England: travels for three months in England, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Italy, and France
January 16 William R. Martin removed from New York City park board, James F. Wenman replaces him as president of the board
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January 22 A petition by 166 taxpayers and citizens of New York City is submitted to the park board protesting Olmsted’s dismissal
January 23 New York park board receives letter from Olmsted, read by Howard A. Martin, requesting that action on his dismissal be postponed until his return from Europe. The board removes him as Landscape Architect of the Department of Public Parks and confirms his appointment as Consulting Landscape Architect without salary
March 1 Boston park commissioners vote to hold a design competition for Back Bay park
March James C. Aldrich and J. J. R. Croes dismissed by New York park board
April 29 Olmsted returns from England
May 6 Charles Dalton requests that Olmsted come to Boston to review competition submittals for Back Bay park
May 13 Olmsted refuses to participate in judging Back Bay park plans
June 3 Hermann Grundel awarded prize for Back Bay park design competition
Summer Olmsted and family living at E. L. Godkin’s in Cambridge, Mass.
June 28 Olmsted makes presentation to Connecticut State Capitol Board, goes on to draw up plans for grounds of the new Capitol
October 24 Olmsted submits first preliminary plans for Back Bay Fens to Boston park commissioners
December 10 Olmsted enters into formal contract with Boston park commission to provide preliminary plan and construction drawings for Back Bay park
December Olmsted draws up plan for subdivision near Newark, N.J., for John Watts Kearny
December 26 Report by independent commission of engineers criticizes the construction of Riverside Avenue
1879
c. January Olmsted visits property of John C. Phillips in Beverly, Mass.
January 8 Olmsted completes writing and sets galley proofs of his review of policies of New York Department of Public Parks since his dismissal in January 1878
January 9 Governor Lucius Robinson calls for creation of a commission to confer with Ontario authorities concerning creation of public reservation at Niagara Falls
May 19 New York State legislature instructs State Survey Commission to report on measures to adopt for creation of Niagara reservation: commission directs Olmsted and James T. Gardner to prepare a plan
May 28 Olmsted and Gardner visit Niagara Falls
Summer Olmsted and family living at Allens’ on Dudley Street, Brookline
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Summer Thomas Wised ell becomes ill and is late in providing working drawings for summer house on U.S. Capitol grounds
Summer Olmsted prepares plans for Arnold Arboretum
July Olmsted spends three weeks examining site for resort and hotel at Rockaway Point on Long Island
September Olmsted presents plans for grounds of Barthold Schlesinger estate in Brookline, Mass.
September 27 Olmsted presents proposal for Niagara Reservation to Ontario and New York State commissioners
1880
c. January Olmsted engages H. H. Richardson to assist in designing Boylston Street bridge and other bridges in Back Bay Fens, Boston
March 29 General Court of Massachusetts authorizes Boston park commissioners to acquire the land of the Arnold Arboretum from Harvard College
March 30 Publication of Special Report of New York State Survey on the preservation of scenery of Niagara Falls; includes petition signed by 268 leading citizens of U.S., Canada, and England collected by Olmsted and Charles Eliot Norton
April 1 Bill to authorize purchase of land for a public reservation at Niagara Falls is introduced in the state legislature
May 1 Olmsted sends John C. Phillips plans for his estate on Wenham Lake, Beverly, Mass.
May 3 Boston Board of Aldermen authorizes park commissioners to work out terms with Harvard College for incorporating Arnold Arboretum into Boston park system
June U.S. Senate refuses to provide appropriation for construction of Capitol terraces
Summer Olmsted and family living at Aliens’ on Dudley St., Brookline
September 10 Olmsted delivers lecture, “The Justifying Value of a Public Park,” to American Social Science Association meeting at Saratoga, N.Y.
c. September 25 Olmsted visits Chicago, reviews condition of South Park
November Plan by Olmsted showing land to be acquired by city of Boston adjacent to Arnold Arboretum
November 29 Olmsted and Charles S. Sargent submit report on planting for Commonwealth Avenue in Boston
December Olmsted submits proposal for treatment of Muddy River as part of Boston park system
1881
May 17 Olmsted submits report on site for park in West Roxbury, Mass.
May 30 Final efforts in New York state legislature to pass bill creating Niagara Reservation: not successful
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July Olmsted and Charles Eliot Norton engage Henry Norman to write for newspapers on proposed Niagara Reservation
June-October Olmsted begins planning grounds for cottages of Montauk Association
July 2 President James Garfield shot
July Olmsted writes “Influence” for use by George W. Curtis in civil service reform campaign
August 15 New York City park board appoints Aneurin Jones, a Welsh carpenter, as Superintendent of Parks
Summer-Fall Olmsted and family living at Mrs. Perrin’s, Walnut St. Brookline; leases New York house at 209 W. 46th Street and spends winter in Brookline—permanent move from New York
August-September Publication of Henry Norman’s newspaper articles on Niagara Falls
October Olmsted publishes Mount Royal. Montreal
November Olmsted writes Charles Francis Adams, Jr., supporting creation of Merry-Mount Park, Quincy, Mass.; works with Adams and H. H. Richardson on Thomas Crane Memorial Library in Quincy, Massachusetts
November 21 Death of stepson Owen Frederick Olmsted
November 19 New York park board votes to appoint Calvert Vaux as Superintending Architect
December Olmsted suffers injury, is incapacitated for short time
December Olmsted draws up plans and report for Industrial Home School in Washington, D.C.
December 27 City Council of Boston authorizes purchase of Arnold Arboretum and leasing of it back to Harvard University
1882
January 2 Proposal for plantings along Canal Street SW to counteract poisonous miasma at U.S. Capitol
January 11 Olmsted appears before joint meeting of the Senate and House committees on public buildings and grounds and shows drawings and elevations of his proposed terrace for the U.S. Capitol
February 13 & 15 Bills are introduced in the New York State legislature to replace the park board of New York City with a single Superintendent of Parks, who would be appointed by the mayor with no provision for confirmation by the Board of Aldermen
February 17 Olmsted submits proofs of printed circular on proposed U.S. Capitol terrace to Edward Clark
c. February 25 Olmsted publishes Spoils of the Park