Wickham Park (Manchester, Connecticut)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wickham Park | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | Manchester, Connecticut |
Size | 250 acres (100 ha) |
Opened | 1960 |
Wickham Park is a nonprofit, private foundation in Manchester and a small part of East Hartford, Connecticut. The park contains 250 acres (1.0 km²) of gardens, open fields, woodlands, ponds, picnic areas and sports facilities, among other attractions.
[edit] History
130 acres of the park was a gift from Clarence Horace Wickham. Another 67 acres were given by Myrtle Williams in 1967, who owned land adjacent to the original property. [1] Olmstead Associates of Brookline, Massachusetts were the designers for the original park layout.
Wickham was an industrialist who invented the window envelope, used in mailing and business. He managed a successful envelope business with his father, Horace John Wickham. [2] He also established the Wickham Memorial Library in East Hartford, Connecticut.
Bank of America finances both the operation and maintenance of the park through a trust established by the Wickham estate.
[edit] Cross Country Racing at Wickham Park
Wickham Park hosts the Connecticut State Class Championships, the State Open Championships, and The Wickham Invitational Race every year. In 2006 the course was changed to make the course more of a cross country course and less of a road course. The 5k (3.1 mi.) course at Wickham Park is famous for "The Green Monster" which is the course's most difficult hill located about 1.5-1.75 miles into the race. The finish of the course is slightly uphill.
With the 2006 changes, the best high school runners in Connecticut completed the course just under 16 minutes, whereas in previous years the winning times were usually 15:25 or less. This increase of about 30-40 seconds is mostly due to a large change in the course after the one-mile (1.6 km) mark, when the course turns onto a woodchip trail that leads runners downhill around the finish line of the course instead of taking a road down past (in front of) the finish.
[edit] External links