Central Park is an urban park in Manhattan in New
York City. The park was initially opened in 1857, on 778 acres (315 ha) of
city-owned land (it is 843 acres today). In 1858, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert
Vaux won a design competition to improve and expand the park
with a plan they entitled the Greensward Plan. Construction began
the same year, continued during the American Civil War, and was completed
in 1873. Central Park is the most visited urban park in the United
States.
Designated a National
Historic Landmark in 1962, the park is currently managed by the Central
Park Conservancy under contract with the city government. The Conservancy
is a non-profit organization that contributes 83.5% of Central Park's $37.5
million annual budget, and employs 80.7% of the park's maintenance staff.
Central Park was the first
landscaped public park in the United States. Advocates of creating the
park--primarily wealthymerchants and landowners--admired the public grounds of
London and Paris and urged that New York needed a comparable facility to
establish its international reputation. A public park, they argued, would offer
their own families an attractive setting for carriage rides and provide
working-class New Yorkers with a healthy alternative to the saloon. After three
years of debate over the park site and cost, in 1853 the state legislature
authorized the City of New York to use the power of eminent domain to acquire
more than 700 acres of land in the center of Manhattan.
An irregular terrain of
swamps and bluffs, punctuated by rocky outcroppings, made the land between Fifth
and Eighth avenues and 59th and 106th streets undesirable for private
development
. Creating the park,
however, required displacing roughly 1,600 poor residents, including Irish pig
farmers and German gardeners, who lived in shanties on the site. At Eighth
Avenue and 82nd Street, Seneca Village had been one of the city's most stable
African-American settlements, with three churches and a school. The extension
of the boundaries to 110th Streetin 1863 brought the park to its current 843
acres.
The question of who
should exercise political control of this new kind of public institution was a
point of contention throughout the nineteenth century.
In appointing the
first Central Park Commission (1857-1870), the Republican-dominated state
legislature abandoned the principle of "home rule" in order to keep
the park out of the hands of locally-elected (and primarily Democratic) office
holders. Under the leadership of Andrew Green, the commission became the city's
first planning agency and oversaw the laying out of uptown Manhattan as well as
the management of the park. After a new citycharter in 1870 restored the park
to local control, the mayor appointed park commissioners.
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