Frederick Law Olmsted

(noun)

American journalist, public administrator, and landscape designer, popularly considered the father of American landscape architecture; famous for codesigning many well-known urban parks, including Central Park and Prospect Park in New York City.

Related Terms

  • bicycle craze

Examples of Frederick Law Olmsted in the following topics:

  • Middle Class

    • Northerners such as Frederick Law Olmsted, who traveled in and wrote about the 1850s South, through the early-twentieth-century historians such as William E.
    • Frederick Law Olmsted traveled in and wrote about the 1850s South
  • Outdoor Recreation

    • Frederick Law Olmsted (April 26, 1822–August 28, 1903) was an American landscape architect, journalist, social critic, and public administrator.
    • In 1883, Olmsted established what is considered to be the first full-time landscape architecture firm in Brookline, Massachusetts.
    • It is now the restored Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site.
    • Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux developed what came to be known as the "Greensward Plan," which was selected as the winning design.
    • Olmsted began executing their plan almost immediately.
  • Popular Culture

    • New York's Central Park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux.
  • Plain Folk of the Old South

    • Frederick Law Olmsted (a Northerner who traveled throughout and wrote about the 1850s South) and historians such as William E.
  • The White City, Chicago, and the World Columbian Exposition

    • Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted designed the exposition as a prototype of their vision of an ideal city.
  • Women and the War

    • Directed by Frederick Law Olmsted, this organization enlisted thousands of volunteers across the North.
  • Prussia Under Frederick the Great

    • In 1781, Frederick decided to make coffee a royal monopoly.
    • In 1763, he issued a decree, which was the first Prussian general school law based on the principles developed by Johann Julius Hecker.
    • An important aspect of Frederick's efforts is the absence of social order reform.
    • Frederick also loved animals and founded the first veterinary school in Germany.
    • Analyze Frederick the Great's domestic reforms and his relationship with the Junker class
  • The Hohenzollerns

    • When Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia, died without a son in 1618, his son-in-law John Sigismund, at the time the prince-elector of the Margraviate of Brandenburg, inherited the Duchy of Prussia.
    • In 1701, Frederick crowned himself Frederick I, King in Prussia.
    • Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg, also called Frederick VI of Nuremberg
    • At the Council of Constance in 1415, King Sigismund elevated Frederick to the rank of Elector and Margrave of Brandenburg as Frederick I.
    • When Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia, died without a son in 1618, his son-in-law John Sigismund inherited the Duchy of Prussia.
  • Black and White Abolitionism

    • Garrison's efforts to recruit eloquent spokesmen led to the discovery of ex-slave Frederick Douglass [], who eventually became a prominent activist in his own right.
    • Using an argument based upon Natural Law and a form of social contract theory, they said that slavery existed outside of the Constitution's scope of legitimate authority and therefore should be abolished.
    • Frederick Douglass (1818–1895), a former slave whose memoirs, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave (1845) and My Bondage and My Freedom (1855), became bestsellers which aided the cause of abolition.
  • From Gradualism to Abolition

    • By 1805, most Northern states had passed laws calling for either immediate or gradual abolition.
    • Those enslaved in Pennsylvania before the 1780 law went into effect remained enslaved for life.
    • New Jersey's gradual abolition law freed future children of slaves at birth, but those enslaved before the passage of the gradual abolition law remained enslaved for life.
    • Another camp, led by Lysander Spooner, Gerrit Smith, and eventually Frederick Douglass, considered the Constitution to be an antislavery document.
    • Garrison's efforts to recruit eloquent spokesmen from within the African-American community led him to Frederick Douglass, who was a prominent activist in his own right.
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