Frederick Law Olmsted (1822–1903)
Author of The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations On Cotton And Slavery In The American Slave States, 1853-1861
About the Author
Image credit: 1893 print (LoC Prints and Photographs, LC-USZ62-36895)
Series
Works by Frederick Law Olmsted
The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations On Cotton And Slavery In The American Slave States, 1853-1861 (1861) — Author — 232 copies, 1 review
Frederick Law Olmsted: Writings on Landscape, Culture, and Society (LOA #270) (Library of America) (2015) 111 copies, 1 review
The Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees: A Preliminary Report, 1865 (1995) 26 copies
Frederick Law Olmsted: Plans and Views of Public Parks (The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted) (2015) 18 copies
Frederick Law Olmsted: Plans and Views of Communities and Private Estates (The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted) (2020) — Editor — 11 copies
Hospital Transports: A Memoir Of The Embarkation Of The Sick And Wounded From The Peninsula Of Virginia In The Summer Of 1862 (2005) 10 copies, 1 review
The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted: Writings on Public Parks, Parkways, and Park Systems (1997) 10 copies
The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted: Defending the Union: The Civil War and the U.S. Sanitary Commission, 1861–1863 (1986) 9 copies
Selections from The Cotton Kingdom by Frederick Law Olmsted (The Bedford Series in History and Culture) (2014) 9 copies
The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted: The Years of Olmsted, Vaux & Company, 1865-1874 (1992) 7 copies
A Journey Through Texas 2 copies
Associated Works
The Civil War: The Third Year Told by Those Who Lived It (2013) — Contributor — 168 copies, 1 review
Writing New York: A Literary Anthology (Expanded 10th-Anniversary Edition) (2008) — Contributor — 101 copies, 1 review
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Concise Edition (2003) — Contributor — 73 copies, 1 review
American Literature: The Makers and the Making (In Two Volumes) (1973) — Contributor, some editions — 25 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Olmsted, Frederick Law
- Birthdate
- 1822-04-25
- Date of death
- 1903-08-28
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Phillips Academy (1838)
- Occupations
- seaman
merchant
journalist
landscape architect
conservationist - Organizations
- American Academy of Arts and Letters ( [1918])
United States Sanitary Commision ( [1861])
Union League Club of New York
The Nation
Sons of the American Revolution
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (show all 8)
Olmsted, Vaux and Company
American Society of Landscape Architects - Relationships
- Olmsted, Frederick, Jr. (son)
Olmsted, John Charles (son)
Burnham, Daniel (friend)
Downing, Andrew Jackson (business partner)
Vaux, Calvert (business partner) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Hartford, Connecticut, USA
- Places of residence
- Hartford, Connecticut, USA
New York, New York, USA
Brookline, Massachusetts, USA - Place of death
- Belmont, Massachusetts, USA
- Burial location
- Old North Cemetery, Hartford, Connecticut, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
If you are anything like me this book will, if not stand on its head, at least knock down your picture of the American South in the years just before the Civil War. Olmsted, the same Frederick Law Olmsted who designed New York City's Central and Prospect parks as well as hundreds of others, decided to take a journey through the Cotton Belt in 1853 and write an account of the economic system there. He did not initially intend to produce an exposé of its slave system about which he had been show more largely ignorant. What he produced was both. Neither was what he expected to find or, more importantly, what we modern readers have typically been taught, at least not in the course of an ordinary education.
Happily he had the writing talents and humanity to take on such a big order. The work is, as its title suggests, a journal bristling with details, including verbatim reproductions of conversations with scores of innkeepers, tenant farmers, landowners and their agents he met along the way, not to mention the slaves and destitute whites who were the victims, though of course not equally, of the system. This book, in fact, is well worth reading for the sake of the narrative alone. How many professional historians can make that claim, never mind present us with a history they have observed with their own eyes and ears?
What Olmsted found was decidedly not the South of Gone with the Wind. (As a more scholarly corrective to that history, though Olmsted is no slouch when it comes to footnotes, I suggest The Peculiar Institution, by Kenneth M. Stampp. I discovered the Journal through the notes in that study. The Peculiar Institution may seem tame enough today, but it was a breakthrough study of the nuts and bolts of American slavery when it appeared in the 1950s.) The Cotton Belt Olmsted traveled through on horseback, accompanied from his starting point in Bayou Sara, Mississippi, only by his dog, has more in common with the exploitative behavior of corporations in Third World nations today than with what we imagine the Old South to have been. Putting aside slavery for the moment, the practices of plantation owners (largely absentee) were the agricultural equivalent of strip mining. At that point, 1853-54, cotton was such a lucrative venture, they planted as much as they could and drove both labor and land to produce as much as possible, regardless of cost to either. The result was a rapid degradation of the soil, which was abandoned after a few years for the sake of richer virgin land to the west. The cost to the human beings involved we are more familiar with.
These "entrepreneurs" were not the genteel characters we have become accustomed to imagining them. They were the equivalent of today's Wall Street sharks — out for the biggest return, and the devil take the consequences to everyone else. They were rough, ignorant men, exacting when it came to profits, which were the responsibility of the plantation managers or "overseers," who in turn drove the slaves accordingly for the sake of what today we call "bonuses." The same overseers frequently aspired to and became plantation owners themselves. The sons of these men could be found littering the bars and other disreputable establishments of the South, running through their inheritance gambling and whoring and often ending up dead in a gunfight. The growing of cotton in the American South was a spectacularly profitable business when practiced on large land holdings, which explains most if not all the resistance met by anyone who wanted to change the one essential factor required for it to thrive: chattel slavery. Slaves were regarded as the machines of production — less docile than machines but more useful than horses and mules.
But only about half of the slaves lived on large land holdings. As is pointed out in The Peculiar Institution and documented in this Journal, most slaveowners were small farmers who owned a few slaves, or even just one, and typically worked in the fields alongside them. Inevitably, the relationship of owner to slave was very different among these small landowners than it was on large plantations. On the latter, the owner of several hundred slaves could not even know most of them by sight, and that's assuming he lived on the land himself rather than entrusting it to an overseer while he and his family summered in Saratoga or took the Grand Tour through Europe.
Olmsted does an excellent job of presenting both the situation on the plantations as well as that of the small landholders. We get a good sense for the economics of both as well as a first-hand account of the lives of the slaves he observed there, including word-for-word conversations he had with those in charge (he was welcomed as a guest, usually a paying guest, by the planters and farmers; it's worth remembering, he did not start out to write an exposé but an economics of the cotton-growing South). The attitudes of owners to slaves runs the gamut from all-but-egalitarian respect to absolute heartlessness.
If you are like me, it's the little things, (though perhaps I should put "little" in quotes), that are most memorable and sometimes most shocking, perhaps because if we have not actually witnessed atrocity we can not truly grasp the experience. But we have all seen human beings degraded in some way or another. We have all seen injustice. I assume it's for that reason that the incident that stands out for me among all the encounters Olmsted has with the institution of slavery has to do with a young woman who has been hiding so as not to go out to work in the fields. The very fact that she is recalcitrant makes her more human to me, and the fact that the incident, while brutal, does not involve the most extreme kind of lethal violence, somehow makes it more pathetic. But for me the telling element in the following account is the attitude of the teenage boy. See if you agree:
I had accidentally encountered him [the overseer], and he was showing me his plantation. And going from one side of it to the other, we had twice crossed a deep gully, at the bottom of which was a thick covert of brushwood. We were crossing it a third time, and had nearly passed through the brush, when the overseers suddenly stopped his horse exclaiming, "What's that? Hallo! Who are you there?"
It was a girl lying at full length on the ground at the bottom of the gully, evidently intending to hide herself from us in the bushes.
"Who are you there?"
"Sam's Sall, sir."
"What are you skulking there for?"
The girl half rose, but gave no answer.
"Have you been here all day?"
"No sir."
"How did you get here?"
The girl made no reply.
"Where have you been all day?"
The answer was unintelligible.
After some further questioning, she said her father accidentally locked her in, when he went out in the morning.
"How did you manage to get out?"
"Pushed the plank off, sir, and crawled out."
The overseer was silent for a moment, looking at the girl, and then said, "That won't do — come out here." The girl arose at once, and walked towards him; she was about eighteen years of age. A bunch of keys hung at her waist, which the overseer espied, and he said, "Your father locked you in; but you got the keys." After a little hesitation, the girl replied that these were the keys of some other locks; her father had the door-key.
Whether her story were true or false, could've been ascertained in two minutes by riding on to the gang with which her father was at work, but the overseer had made up his mind as to the facts of the case.
"That won't do," said he, "get down on your knees." The girl knelt on the ground; he got off his horse, and holding him with his left hand, struck her thirty or forty blows across the shoulders with his tough, flexible, "raw-hide." They were well laid on, as a boatswain would thrash a skulking sailor, or as some people flog a baulky horse, but with no appearance of angry excitement on the part of the overseer. At every stroke the girl winced, and exclaimed, "Yes, sir!" Or "Ah, sir!" Or "Please, sir," not groaning or screaming. At length he stopped and said, "Now tell me the truth." The girl repeated the same story. "You have not got enough yet," said he, "pull up your clothes — lie down." The girl without any hesitation, without a word or look of remonstrance or entreaty, drew closely all her garments under her shoulders, and laid down upon the ground with her face toward the overseer, who continued to flog her with the raw-hide, across her naked loins and thigh, with as much strength as before. She now shrunk away from him, not rising, but writhing, groveling, and screaming, "Oh, don't, sir! Oh, please stop, master! Please, sir! Oh, that's enough, master! Oh, Lord! Oh, master, master! Oh, God, master, do stop! Oh, God, master! Oh, God, master!"
A young gentleman of fifteen was with us; he had ridden in front, and now, turning on his horse looked back with an expression only of impatience at the delay. It was the first time I had ever seen a woman flogged. I had seen a man cudgeled and beaten, in the heat of passion, before, but never flogged with one hundredth part of the severity used in this case. I glanced again at the perfectly passionless but rather grim business-like face of the overseer, and again at the young gentleman, who had turned away; if not indifferent he had evidently not the faintest sympathy with my emotion. Only my horse chafed with excitement. I gave him rein and spur and we plunged into the bushes and scrambled fiercely up the steep activity. The screaming yells and the whip strokes had ceased when I reached the top of the bank. Choking, sobbing, spasmodic groans only were heard. I rode on to where the road coming diagonally up the ravine ran out upon the cotton-fields. My young companion met me there, and immediately afterward the overseer. He laughed as he joined us, and said,
"She meant to cheat me out of a day's work — and she has done it, too."
"Did you succeed in getting another story from her?"
"No; she stuck to it."
"Was it not perhaps true?"
"Oh no, sir, she slipped out of the gang when they were going to work and she's been dodging about all day, going from one place to another as she saw me coming. She saw us crossing there a little while ago, and thought we had gone to the quarters, but we turned back so quick, we came into the gully before she knew it, and she could do nothing but lie down in the bushes."
"I suppose they often slip off so."
"No, sir; I never had one do so before — not like this; they often run away to the woods and are gone sometime, but I never had a dodge-off like this before."
"Was it necessary to punish her so severely?"
"Oh yes, sir," (laughing again.) "If I hadn't punished her so hard she would've done the same thing again to-morrow, and half the people on the plantation would've followed her example. Oh, you've no idea how lazy these niggers are; you northern people don't know any thing about it. They never do any work at all if they were not afraid of being whipped."
When the treatment of a human being, who was not, incidentally, free to leave and find employment elsewhere, has been reduced to this level of casual violence, the very foundation of a basic humanity has been breached. I have had the same reaction to accounts by former soldiers who served as part of an occupying force in a land not their own. The tolerance of indignity or outrage that has become ordinary and daily is more disturbing for some reason than statistics of cold-blooded murder.
The book's cover boasts the following blurbs:
"An admirable picture of man and slavery in the Southern States." – Charles Darwin;
"Calm and dispassionate." – John Stuart Mill;
"The most thorough exposé of the economical [sic] view of the subject which has ever appeared…" – Harriet Beecher Stowe;
"I have learned more about the South from your books than from all others put together." – James Russell Lowell; and,
"Why not…leave us alone? Why not attend to your own business?" – Savannah Republican.
Not a bad lineup of endorsements. And well-deserved.
Note: This is the edition brought out by Schocken Books Sourcebooks in Negro History (c) 1970. show less
Happily he had the writing talents and humanity to take on such a big order. The work is, as its title suggests, a journal bristling with details, including verbatim reproductions of conversations with scores of innkeepers, tenant farmers, landowners and their agents he met along the way, not to mention the slaves and destitute whites who were the victims, though of course not equally, of the system. This book, in fact, is well worth reading for the sake of the narrative alone. How many professional historians can make that claim, never mind present us with a history they have observed with their own eyes and ears?
What Olmsted found was decidedly not the South of Gone with the Wind. (As a more scholarly corrective to that history, though Olmsted is no slouch when it comes to footnotes, I suggest The Peculiar Institution, by Kenneth M. Stampp. I discovered the Journal through the notes in that study. The Peculiar Institution may seem tame enough today, but it was a breakthrough study of the nuts and bolts of American slavery when it appeared in the 1950s.) The Cotton Belt Olmsted traveled through on horseback, accompanied from his starting point in Bayou Sara, Mississippi, only by his dog, has more in common with the exploitative behavior of corporations in Third World nations today than with what we imagine the Old South to have been. Putting aside slavery for the moment, the practices of plantation owners (largely absentee) were the agricultural equivalent of strip mining. At that point, 1853-54, cotton was such a lucrative venture, they planted as much as they could and drove both labor and land to produce as much as possible, regardless of cost to either. The result was a rapid degradation of the soil, which was abandoned after a few years for the sake of richer virgin land to the west. The cost to the human beings involved we are more familiar with.
These "entrepreneurs" were not the genteel characters we have become accustomed to imagining them. They were the equivalent of today's Wall Street sharks — out for the biggest return, and the devil take the consequences to everyone else. They were rough, ignorant men, exacting when it came to profits, which were the responsibility of the plantation managers or "overseers," who in turn drove the slaves accordingly for the sake of what today we call "bonuses." The same overseers frequently aspired to and became plantation owners themselves. The sons of these men could be found littering the bars and other disreputable establishments of the South, running through their inheritance gambling and whoring and often ending up dead in a gunfight. The growing of cotton in the American South was a spectacularly profitable business when practiced on large land holdings, which explains most if not all the resistance met by anyone who wanted to change the one essential factor required for it to thrive: chattel slavery. Slaves were regarded as the machines of production — less docile than machines but more useful than horses and mules.
But only about half of the slaves lived on large land holdings. As is pointed out in The Peculiar Institution and documented in this Journal, most slaveowners were small farmers who owned a few slaves, or even just one, and typically worked in the fields alongside them. Inevitably, the relationship of owner to slave was very different among these small landowners than it was on large plantations. On the latter, the owner of several hundred slaves could not even know most of them by sight, and that's assuming he lived on the land himself rather than entrusting it to an overseer while he and his family summered in Saratoga or took the Grand Tour through Europe.
Olmsted does an excellent job of presenting both the situation on the plantations as well as that of the small landholders. We get a good sense for the economics of both as well as a first-hand account of the lives of the slaves he observed there, including word-for-word conversations he had with those in charge (he was welcomed as a guest, usually a paying guest, by the planters and farmers; it's worth remembering, he did not start out to write an exposé but an economics of the cotton-growing South). The attitudes of owners to slaves runs the gamut from all-but-egalitarian respect to absolute heartlessness.
If you are like me, it's the little things, (though perhaps I should put "little" in quotes), that are most memorable and sometimes most shocking, perhaps because if we have not actually witnessed atrocity we can not truly grasp the experience. But we have all seen human beings degraded in some way or another. We have all seen injustice. I assume it's for that reason that the incident that stands out for me among all the encounters Olmsted has with the institution of slavery has to do with a young woman who has been hiding so as not to go out to work in the fields. The very fact that she is recalcitrant makes her more human to me, and the fact that the incident, while brutal, does not involve the most extreme kind of lethal violence, somehow makes it more pathetic. But for me the telling element in the following account is the attitude of the teenage boy. See if you agree:
I had accidentally encountered him [the overseer], and he was showing me his plantation. And going from one side of it to the other, we had twice crossed a deep gully, at the bottom of which was a thick covert of brushwood. We were crossing it a third time, and had nearly passed through the brush, when the overseers suddenly stopped his horse exclaiming, "What's that? Hallo! Who are you there?"
It was a girl lying at full length on the ground at the bottom of the gully, evidently intending to hide herself from us in the bushes.
"Who are you there?"
"Sam's Sall, sir."
"What are you skulking there for?"
The girl half rose, but gave no answer.
"Have you been here all day?"
"No sir."
"How did you get here?"
The girl made no reply.
"Where have you been all day?"
The answer was unintelligible.
After some further questioning, she said her father accidentally locked her in, when he went out in the morning.
"How did you manage to get out?"
"Pushed the plank off, sir, and crawled out."
The overseer was silent for a moment, looking at the girl, and then said, "That won't do — come out here." The girl arose at once, and walked towards him; she was about eighteen years of age. A bunch of keys hung at her waist, which the overseer espied, and he said, "Your father locked you in; but you got the keys." After a little hesitation, the girl replied that these were the keys of some other locks; her father had the door-key.
Whether her story were true or false, could've been ascertained in two minutes by riding on to the gang with which her father was at work, but the overseer had made up his mind as to the facts of the case.
"That won't do," said he, "get down on your knees." The girl knelt on the ground; he got off his horse, and holding him with his left hand, struck her thirty or forty blows across the shoulders with his tough, flexible, "raw-hide." They were well laid on, as a boatswain would thrash a skulking sailor, or as some people flog a baulky horse, but with no appearance of angry excitement on the part of the overseer. At every stroke the girl winced, and exclaimed, "Yes, sir!" Or "Ah, sir!" Or "Please, sir," not groaning or screaming. At length he stopped and said, "Now tell me the truth." The girl repeated the same story. "You have not got enough yet," said he, "pull up your clothes — lie down." The girl without any hesitation, without a word or look of remonstrance or entreaty, drew closely all her garments under her shoulders, and laid down upon the ground with her face toward the overseer, who continued to flog her with the raw-hide, across her naked loins and thigh, with as much strength as before. She now shrunk away from him, not rising, but writhing, groveling, and screaming, "Oh, don't, sir! Oh, please stop, master! Please, sir! Oh, that's enough, master! Oh, Lord! Oh, master, master! Oh, God, master, do stop! Oh, God, master! Oh, God, master!"
A young gentleman of fifteen was with us; he had ridden in front, and now, turning on his horse looked back with an expression only of impatience at the delay. It was the first time I had ever seen a woman flogged. I had seen a man cudgeled and beaten, in the heat of passion, before, but never flogged with one hundredth part of the severity used in this case. I glanced again at the perfectly passionless but rather grim business-like face of the overseer, and again at the young gentleman, who had turned away; if not indifferent he had evidently not the faintest sympathy with my emotion. Only my horse chafed with excitement. I gave him rein and spur and we plunged into the bushes and scrambled fiercely up the steep activity. The screaming yells and the whip strokes had ceased when I reached the top of the bank. Choking, sobbing, spasmodic groans only were heard. I rode on to where the road coming diagonally up the ravine ran out upon the cotton-fields. My young companion met me there, and immediately afterward the overseer. He laughed as he joined us, and said,
"She meant to cheat me out of a day's work — and she has done it, too."
"Did you succeed in getting another story from her?"
"No; she stuck to it."
"Was it not perhaps true?"
"Oh no, sir, she slipped out of the gang when they were going to work and she's been dodging about all day, going from one place to another as she saw me coming. She saw us crossing there a little while ago, and thought we had gone to the quarters, but we turned back so quick, we came into the gully before she knew it, and she could do nothing but lie down in the bushes."
"I suppose they often slip off so."
"No, sir; I never had one do so before — not like this; they often run away to the woods and are gone sometime, but I never had a dodge-off like this before."
"Was it necessary to punish her so severely?"
"Oh yes, sir," (laughing again.) "If I hadn't punished her so hard she would've done the same thing again to-morrow, and half the people on the plantation would've followed her example. Oh, you've no idea how lazy these niggers are; you northern people don't know any thing about it. They never do any work at all if they were not afraid of being whipped."
When the treatment of a human being, who was not, incidentally, free to leave and find employment elsewhere, has been reduced to this level of casual violence, the very foundation of a basic humanity has been breached. I have had the same reaction to accounts by former soldiers who served as part of an occupying force in a land not their own. The tolerance of indignity or outrage that has become ordinary and daily is more disturbing for some reason than statistics of cold-blooded murder.
The book's cover boasts the following blurbs:
"An admirable picture of man and slavery in the Southern States." – Charles Darwin;
"Calm and dispassionate." – John Stuart Mill;
"The most thorough exposé of the economical [sic] view of the subject which has ever appeared…" – Harriet Beecher Stowe;
"I have learned more about the South from your books than from all others put together." – James Russell Lowell; and,
"Why not…leave us alone? Why not attend to your own business?" – Savannah Republican.
Not a bad lineup of endorsements. And well-deserved.
Note: This is the edition brought out by Schocken Books Sourcebooks in Negro History (c) 1970. show less
LOA's compendium of Olmsted writings is a mix of biography, memoir, and essay -- unexpectedly expansive as a read, quite full of wonder really, but not matching any familiar reading experience. I found it made for a pleasurable read, so long as I let myself be guided where it went, allowed a different type of book to reveal itself to me.
My primary interest in Writings on Landscape, Culture, and Society was Olmsted's landscape & environmental writings. I knew of Olmsted as the architect for show more NYC's Central Park, and his influence on Chicago's White City. Included here is a wealth of writing on landscape architecture and design, but Olmsted's approach is far more holistic than anticipated, impressively so. His professional experience extended to executive of sanitary commission (read: Red Cross) for the Union in the US Civil War, journalism, and an abiding interest in nautical service. His outlook and principles amount to an American Renaissance Man, and his writings (including the many letters included here) reflect that broad, humanitarian concern.
Arranged chronologically, I expect it will be best to revisit the book by dipping into select pieces by topic. In my first reading (for which I completed perhaps three-quarters of the whole), I proceeded from first page and read straight through. This provides a pleasant introduction to Olmsted's interests and experience, but also means it's easy to lose the thread of particular themes as they are dropped for something else in the chronology.
//
The point that I stand for is that no house is a fit place for a family that has not both public and private outside apartments. [458]
Themes of interest:
- Landscape architecture, not only design of public parks or private grounds but also ecology and conservation
- White supremacy and race relations in the US
- Proper role of public space in health and vitality of different settlements: village, town, city
- Education
- Influence of nautical tradition and ideal of gentleman farmer show less
My primary interest in Writings on Landscape, Culture, and Society was Olmsted's landscape & environmental writings. I knew of Olmsted as the architect for show more NYC's Central Park, and his influence on Chicago's White City. Included here is a wealth of writing on landscape architecture and design, but Olmsted's approach is far more holistic than anticipated, impressively so. His professional experience extended to executive of sanitary commission (read: Red Cross) for the Union in the US Civil War, journalism, and an abiding interest in nautical service. His outlook and principles amount to an American Renaissance Man, and his writings (including the many letters included here) reflect that broad, humanitarian concern.
Arranged chronologically, I expect it will be best to revisit the book by dipping into select pieces by topic. In my first reading (for which I completed perhaps three-quarters of the whole), I proceeded from first page and read straight through. This provides a pleasant introduction to Olmsted's interests and experience, but also means it's easy to lose the thread of particular themes as they are dropped for something else in the chronology.
//
The point that I stand for is that no house is a fit place for a family that has not both public and private outside apartments. [458]
Themes of interest:
- Landscape architecture, not only design of public parks or private grounds but also ecology and conservation
- White supremacy and race relations in the US
- Proper role of public space in health and vitality of different settlements: village, town, city
- Education
- Influence of nautical tradition and ideal of gentleman farmer show less
Hospital transports : a memoir of the embarkation of the sick and wounded from the peninsula of Virginia in the summer o by Laura L. Behling
Frederick Law Olmsted's 1863 account of the Sanitary Commission's hospital ships during the Peninsular Campaign of 1862 is based on his (and his staff's) letters. It is part report, part diary including vignettes of praise, censure and trivia. He develops a well-oiled system as set out in the regulations in appendix B to relieve this "republic of suffering".
Olmsted, in charge of the Sanitary Commission, has to manage the rapid inflow of patients at White House Landing, organize their care show more and supply the necessary resources with a staff of doctors, dressers (2nd-year medical students), women volunteers ("active as cats"), male nurses and convalescent volunteers. Fighting for humanity means encroaching on the turf of the military, maritime and medical professionals who often neglected the basic needs (food, drink and shelter) of the sick and wounded.
To prevent overloading the ships, triage of the wounded was necessary, keeping some of them on land, some on a floating hospital and transporting the rest (8,000) via shuttles to Fort Monroe or the North (four days to Baltimore, seven to New York). Olmsted saw a lot of false economies: Many sick soldiers could have been returned to the front quickly if given a few days rest and proper nourishment. Instead, their health deteriorated and required a lengthy recovery up north.
Part marketing tool, part report, part history, it is a curious mix of small and large steps in the foundation of a medical service, of trivial and important acts of humanity and kindness in time of war. show less
Olmsted, in charge of the Sanitary Commission, has to manage the rapid inflow of patients at White House Landing, organize their care show more and supply the necessary resources with a staff of doctors, dressers (2nd-year medical students), women volunteers ("active as cats"), male nurses and convalescent volunteers. Fighting for humanity means encroaching on the turf of the military, maritime and medical professionals who often neglected the basic needs (food, drink and shelter) of the sick and wounded.
To prevent overloading the ships, triage of the wounded was necessary, keeping some of them on land, some on a floating hospital and transporting the rest (8,000) via shuttles to Fort Monroe or the North (four days to Baltimore, seven to New York). Olmsted saw a lot of false economies: Many sick soldiers could have been returned to the front quickly if given a few days rest and proper nourishment. Instead, their health deteriorated and required a lengthy recovery up north.
Part marketing tool, part report, part history, it is a curious mix of small and large steps in the foundation of a medical service, of trivial and important acts of humanity and kindness in time of war. show less
A fascinating collection of historical documents covering the period from the 1850s to the 1890s and the creation of New York City's Central Park, and the controversies that surrounded how the park was to be developed, managed and used by the public. To a certain extent, Frederick Law Olmstead, Sr. (one of the two original landscape designers) settles a number of scores with the Democratic "Tammany Hall" machine that made life very difficult for him, and for those that supported his show more particular vision of a bucolic park. This particular book is a reprint of a book that was originally published in 1928, at a period when Central Park was in decline; it would subsequently be the subject of much renovation work by Robert Moses in the 1930s, and another round of renovation work in the 1980s, after another period of decline. Many of the issues tackled in the book, such as political interference, lack of funding, and careless use by the public, still resonate today. Stretches of the book can be pretty dry reading, but there are other parts that are riveting. This particular edition, it should be noted, has a very nice fold-out map at the back. show less
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