Parker's vision: 125 years of Quincy parks

On July 23, 1888, a group of private citizens, led by Edward J. Parker, incorporated as the Quincy Boulevard and Park Association. In the ensuing 125 years this association of private citizens and its successor, the Quincy Park District , would develop a system of parks and recreational facilities that would stand as a monument to the ideals of the naturalistic Middle Western park movement, as envisioned by the association and its supervising landscape architects, O. C. Simonds and H. W. S. Cleveland of Chicago.
Of E. J. Parker, an associate of C. H. Bull and Robert W. Gardner in Quincy banking and philanthropy, it was said, "The strong characteristics of Mr. Parker's character were patience, persistency and absolute devotion to any cause or institution to which he had pledged his faith and work." In his work to establish the parks, these characteristic would stand him well, for the task facing Parker and the association was a daunting one.
An early history of the association noted, "The conditions then existing for the prosecution of the work undertaken by the association were as unfavorable as could well be imagined. No general public demand for parks and boulevards existed and there was much hostility to the expenditure of public moneys for that purpose. ... The outlook for a successful prosecution of the work undertaken by the association seemed, to the average man, to be hopeless."
Over the years a confusing system of financing would develop, including a three mil municipal tax, a city dog licensing fee, and a small percentage of all municipal property taxes collected each year before March 10. Still, many of the early land purchases, as well as improvements to the newly established parks, were paid for by private funds and donations.
In the first plat of the city in 1826 a central square had been designated. "John's Square," which later became Washington Square and then Washington Park, was reserved as a public space but was soon fenced to exclude wandering livestock and carriage horses. A second public square, Jefferson, was used as Quincy's first burial ground. When a new Adams County courthouse was built at that location in 1837, the burials were moved to a third public square, Madison, at today's 24th and Maine.
None of these three original squares was particularly suitable for picnicking and strolling, so Quincyans tended to go to popular privately owned spots such as Watson's Spring south of the city or Cedar Creek to the north.
In 1888 the city of Quincy released the area of Madison Square to the new Boulevard and Park Association. By 1891 the former burial ground had been transformed into the city's first planned public park, based on the designs of H. W. S. Cleveland. In 1892 "a tasteful stone and granitoid entrance" designed by Quincy architect Harvey Chatten was added at the northwest corner of the park, and in 1900 a fountain with a 34-foot basin designed by architect E. M. Wood of Quincy was placed in the middle of the park.
The first park designed solely as a natural space was begun in 1891, when five acres high on the bluffs north of town were purchased by the association, forming the beginnings of Riverview Park. Landscape architect O. C. Simonds laid out this park to emphasize the natural topography of the area. A series of winding walkways and driving paths were woven among groves of native trees and flowering shrubbery.
As noted in the 1917 history of the parks, this association with Simonds "was a most fortunate thing for Quincy's park system, which owes him a large part of its beauty and symmetrical development. With the true spirit of an artist he knew how to preserve the native beauty of the landscape, while he had a genius for seizing upon the striking points and for overcoming all difficulties and obstacles."
As Riverview Park was under development on the north side of the city, the association began to look for a similar area to the south. Next to be purchased and developed was a 55-acre parcel of land owned by Judge B. F. Berrian of Quincy and his brothers. This tract, south of Jefferson and east of Eighth Street, included the already popular picnicking and fishing areas of Watson's Spring and Curtis Creek. In 1899 the iconic stone arched bridge over Curtis Creek at Eighth Street, designed by Quincy architect E. M. Wood, was built at a cost of $5,600.
At the same time Parker and others were lobbying to preserve the magnificent bluff-top river overlooks and Native American burial mounds that lay to the south of Woodland cemetery in an area that had long been neglected and was about to be sold by lot for development. When Parker brought this matter to the attention of the Quincy City Council, however, he was met with stiff resistance. In reporting the council proceedings, local newspapers recorded these exchanges:
Alderman Middendorff: "As the city cannot buy the whole South Side, it might as well stop where it is."
Mayor Steinbach: "Mr. Parker is a gentleman – every inch – and a good citizen, but he is an enthusiast on parks and would run the city in debt for their extensive improvement if he could. It won't do."
Alderman Sweet: "… thought the association had got enough money out of the present administration …. He, for one, had been rawhided enough for the money spent on parks and boulevards, and while he considered the money well spent, yet he did not think more should be asked for at this time."
Anton Binkert, one of the land owners, in talking to a local newspaper reporter about the proposed transaction, noted that the owners "could cut up the ground and sell it for a far better price: so why should we take $3000 for the whole ten acres?"
To which the apparently ardent reporter replied, "I'll tell you why. Because the people of Quincy want that ground for park purposes, and because there is at last a practicable way for them to buy, and because you, Anton Binkert, and Chauncey H. Castle and John S. Cruttenden will not cut up those priceless Indian Mounds and that incomparable river view into building lots, and because E.J. Parker will haunt you night and day until you all consent."
Binkert then responded, "Mr. Parker has made life a burden to us already, and only for his persistence we would never have held the property intact half this long." In the end the property was preserved intact by the owners and became the basis for the present Indian Mounds Park on the south side of Quincy.
Today, after 125 years of design and development, the Quincy Park System consists of nearly 1,000 acres of natural and recreational facilities. The enduring value of this system of parks to the lives of all Quincyans is perhaps best exemplified by the comments of a visitor to the city in 1902.
In May of that year J. R. L. Clarkson told the local papers, "I am a visitor in Quincy now, but it was once my home. I love it still. I love it for its magnificent situation, for its broad streets, for its many tasteful homes, for its grace and beauty, for its activity and life, and for its big-hearted, genial people."
And about an afternoon spent in the parks he said, "Oh, the river, the river, the beautiful, beautiful river … We walked among the flowers, along the lawns, and reveled in the beauties of Riverview awhile, then came away with our hearts lifted up and made purer, and better, and kinder, and more loving."
Lynn M. Snyder is a native of Adams County, a semi-retired archaeologist and museum researcher, a former librarian and present library volunteer at the Veterans Home, and a Historical Society board member and volunteer.
Sources
"Here is a lover." Quincy Daily Journal. May 27, 1902.
Quincy Boulevard and Park Association. History of the Park System of Quincy, Illinois
1888 to 1917. Quincy, IL: Jost & Kiefer Co., 1917.
Quincy Boulevard and Park Association. Minutes, Vol. 1 & 2. July 7, 1888 – Aug 22,
1890; April 8, 1891 – Mar 4, 1898. Collections of the Historical Society of Quincy and
Adams County.
Quincy Boulevard and Park Association. Scrapbooks, Vols. 1-3, April 1891 – Nov. 18,
1924. Collections of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Quincy Park District . "Parks." Accessed July, 2013. www.quincyparkdistrict.com .
Quincy Park Foundation. "125 Years of Quincy Parks." Accessed July, 2013. www.quincyparkfoundation.org .
"Talked on Street Work." Quincy Daily Herald. January 19, 1894.
Wilcox, David F. ed. Quincy and Adams County History and Representative Men.
Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1919.





