HCS
webgarden

12th to 1st
1st to 15th
16th
17th
18th
19th to 20th









 

Olmsted, Frederick Law 1822-1903  

Olmsted was a landscape architect, educated at private schools and a special student at Yale College. He had seven year's farming experience. He took several trips abroad studying many parks and private estates. He became Superintendent and Landscape Architect for Central Park in association with a young English architect who had been associated with Andrew Downing.

Becoming associated with various other partners, his principal works were the parks of Brooklyn, Buffalo, Chicago ( South Park), Milwaukee, Rochester, Louisville, Boston, Detroit and many other cities and towns. He also was architect for the United States Capitol grounds at Washington; World's Fair at Chicago; and the great Biltmore Estate of George W. Vanderbilt, just outside Asheville, North Carolina.

He did a large amount of technical writing and was associated with many architects, engineers, landscape architects, landscape gardeners in an advisory way. He was particularly interested in the naturalistic style of planting and was the originator of the extreme use of shrubbery borders and masses as the main feature of landscape planting. His influence throughout the country has been exceedingly great.

 

Additional information about Frederick Law Olmsted may be found on the Internet.

National Historic Site

Olmsted Web Site

Yosemite History

Museum Collection Archive

A View of Frederick Law Olmsted

 

 

 



 
 


Website Administrator: Dr. Tim Rhodus
Department of Horticulture and Crop Science
Email: rhodus.1@osu.edu
© 2002 Ohio State University

FAQ factsheets PLANTFACTS