Esther Short Park
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Esther Short Park in Vancouver, Washington was established in 1853, and is the oldest public park in the state of Washington.[1] It has been called the "oldest public park in the West" by some, but was created after Lafayette Park in St. Louis, Missouri. [2] [3] It is located in the city's downtown between West Columbia and 8th Street. It was bequeathed to the city in 1862, and includes a children's playground, a rose garden, a large fountain system made of columnar basalt, a bell/clock tower, and the historic Slocum House.[2] The park also houses the outdoor farmer's market each weekend. In the summer of 2007, the park hosted over 30 outdoor summer concerts, many free.[4]
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[edit] Esther Short
Esther Short herself was an early Vancouver resident, whose husband Amos and ten children "jumped a claim" near present-day downtown Vancouver when the claimant left for California. She also gave permission for ferry boats to land on her property, at the foot of present-day Washington Street, where she operated a restaurant and hotel called The Alta House. The park was part of this land, bequeathed as a public plaza by Esther after Amos died in a shipwreck at the mouth of the Columbia.[5] Some of her other land is presently the Port of Vancouver.[6]
Esther Short Park's statue "The Pioneer Mother" was dedicated July 22, 1929; its sculptor Avard Fairbanks's other work includes the Dodge hood ornament, the Plymouth "winged mermaid" and various renditions of the Angel Moroni.[citation needed]
[edit] Contemporary development
Before the last decade or so, the city of Vancouver's core downtown was in serious economic decline, and the park was mainly home to transients. A 1996 Columbian article named the park as the nucleus of the majority of emergency 911 calls in the city.[7] As part of the push for revitalization by mayor Royce Pollard and others, the park received $5.67 million in direct aid, and investment of $220 million of capital funded a slew of development in and surrounding the park. This movement to revamp the park is widely believed to have been jump started by a 1997 incident involving Pollard at a series of social events he designed to make the park a family-friendly gathering place.[7] According to reports, a transient individual pushed Pollard in the back with a shopping cart, and made threatening comments warning him to leave. The man was arrested, and henceforth public interest and support in reclaiming the park surged.[7] In the summer of 2007, the property received the "Development of Excellence" award from the Urban Land Institute of Oregon and Southwest Washington.[8]
[edit] References
- ^ cityofvancouver.us
- ^ a b Project for Public Spaces
- ^ greatstreets.org
- ^ "Getting in tune with summer" By Mike Bailey, Columbian staff writer Tuesday, May 22, 2007
- ^ Fercho, E. (1985). The history of Esther Short Park. Clark County History 1985.
- ^ The Columbian A Look Back at Vancouver History
- ^ a b c "Esther Short Park plays pivotal dual role in Vancouver's downtown revival" Sunday, May 23, 2004 By Jonathan Nelson, Columbian staff writer
- ^ The Columbian Thursday, August 23, 2007
[edit] External links
- Esther Short Park is at coordinates Coordinates: