(Mss
182)
Inventory
Earl K.
Long Library
November
1985
Contents
Summary
Historical
Note
Container
List
Index
Terms
Procedures
for Requesting Special Collections Materials
Summary
Size: 2 items
Geographic
locations:
Inclusive dates: 1984, 1985
Summary: One copy of Audubon
Park: An Urban Eden / text by L. Ronald Forman and Joseph Logsdon with John
Wilds, and photographs by David King Gleason and David Kleck (Baton Rouge, La.:
D. K. Gleason/Friends of the Zoo, c1985); photocopy of typescript by Harriet K.
Stern entitled "The History of Audubon Park Zoological Gardens"
(October 1984).
Related
collections: Audubon Park Commission Collection
(Mss 56); Audubon Park Commission Collection, Addendum 2
(Mss 259)
Source: Gift,
October-November 1985
Access: No restrictions
Copyright: Physical
rights are retained by the Earl K. Long Library,
Citation:
Historical Note
In 1893, noted park
designer Frederick Law Olmsted was invited to draw up plans for a
million-dollar improvement program, but not until 1897 did his son, John
Charles Olmsted, inspect the site and begin work on what would become the
master plan for
When a hurricane
destroyed Horticultural Hall in 1915, the insurance payment of ten thousand
dollars was used to build a greenhouse and a cage for flying birds. The latter foreshadowed today's zoo. A formal garden took shape in 1921, and in
1924 an aquarium was opened. In the same
year, the park regained use of a fifty-acre site which had been occupied by a
sugar experiment station, and the additional space opened the way for various
athletic facilities. Perhaps the most
notable of these was the natatorium, which was, when it opened on
In 1919, Daniel D.
Moore, manager-editor of the
Despite national
acclaim in the 1950s for its achievement in producing the first whooping
cranes--an almost extinct species--hatched in captivity, inadequate funding in
the 1950s and 1960s caused the zoo to deteriorate. Its rejuvenation began in 1971 when the
Bureau of Governmental Research presented plans for expansion and improvement. The following year, voters approved a tax
increase to fund the park's development, and community efforts to rebuild the
zoo began in 1976. An indication of the
success of these initiatives is the Audubon Zoo's receipt in 1984 of the
National Landscape Award of the American Association of Nurserymen. It was just the third time in half a century
that the prestigious award was presented.
SOURCE: Forman, L. Ronald, and Joseph Logsdon, with John Wilds.
Container List
182-1 One copy of Audubon
Park: An Urban Eden / text by L. Ronald Forman and Joseph Logsdon with John
Wilds, and photographs by David King Gleason and David Kleck (Baton Rouge, La.:
D. K. Gleason/Friends of the Zoo, c1985); photocopy of typescript by Harriet K.
Stern entitled "The History of Audubon Park Zoological Gardens"
(October 1984).
Index Terms
Forman, L. Ronald
Gleason, David King
Kleck, David
Logsdon, Joseph
Parks—
Stern, Harriet
Wilds, John