Sunday, August 29, 2010

Preview of Walk #2: Garden of Eden


Our second walk took us through Nicholas Longworth, Sr.'s self-made Garden of Eden, creatively called Eden Park.  No, really, we learned that Eden Park was basically named Eden as in the Garden of Eden, which Mr. Longworth felt he'd created.


Anyways, walk No. 2 out of  "Walking the Steps of Cincinnati: A Guide to the Queen City's Scenic and Historic Secrets" led us all around Eden park - we started at the corner of Parkside & Louden in Mt Adams, walked through the park to as far north as the lakes overlook, wandered back past the Cincinnati Art Museum, then around the Playhouse in the Park to where we'd begun.  The full walk will be posted soon.


Here are some fun facts we learned along the way:
  • Before the Markland Dam was built in the 1950s, Bellevue and Dayton, KY, both had popular white sand beaches that Cincinnatians and Kentuckians flocked to during the summer for swimming, sunning, and boating.
  • On Eden Park Dr. you'll find the Melan Arch Bridge - which was the first steel-reinforced, poured concrete bridge built in the Midwest.  That's a first all Cincinnatians should know and be pround of, right?  It just makes me think of "the Pride of UC," Crosley Tower - not only is it the tallest building at UC but the only thing I remember from my campus visit tour was that it's the largest singly-poured concrete structure in the Midwest.  Know and be proud.
  • The gazebo that serves as the symbol for Eden Park on city maps and street signs used to be a spring house that was known for its medicinal waters.  Sorry, it's all dried up now.  No healing for you!
  • The bandstand situated between Mirror Lake and the Art Museum has been around since 1872.  The video below is gonna drop some knowledge from the book:
  • There's a spicy crime story connected to the park!  I'm going to quote it from the book: "It was here... where infamous bootlegger George Remus murdered his wife in 1927, after she aided the State's case and moved in with a government agent.  Pleading insanity, Remus was hospitalized for five months and then set free.  Years late, it is said, the gun was found in the bushes by a child on an Easter egg hunt."  Happy Easter!
  • President Hoover dedicated the Ohio River Monument found at the lakes overlook.  I stood at this monument and was blown away thinking about how I was exactly half way between the start of the Ohio River (in Pittsburgh, PA) and the end (in Cairo, IL).
  • I have a new favorite statue, given to the city of Cincinnati by the Italian government in 1931.  I have yet to figure out why Italy doesn't like us.

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