File:AERIAL VIEW, LOOKING NORTH - Woodlands Cemetery, 4000 Woodlands Avenue, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA HALS PA-5-65.tif

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AERIAL VIEW, LOOKING NORTH - Woodlands Cemetery, 4000 Woodlands Avenue, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA
Photographer
Boucher, Jack E.
Title
AERIAL VIEW, LOOKING NORTH - Woodlands Cemetery, 4000 Woodlands Avenue, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA
Description
Arzola, Robert R, project manager
Depicted place Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia
Date 2003
Dimensions 4 x 5 in.
Current location
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Accession number
HALS PA-5-65
Credit line
This file comes from the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) or Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS). These are programs of the National Park Service established for the purpose of documenting historic places. Records consist of measured drawings, archival photographs, and written reports.

This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing.

Notes
  • See also HABS No. PA-1125 and PA-1125-A for related documentation on The Woodlands and The Woodlands, Stable-Carriage House. Additional documentation includes measured drawings, photographs, and written data.
  • Significance: Philadelphia's Woodlands Cemetery occupies the grounds of an estate recognized throughout post-Revolutionary America as a leading example of English taste in architecture and landscape gardening. This was William Hamilton's Woodlands, formed in the late eighteenth century on the low bluff where Mill Creek, now buried, meets the Schuylkill River. The mansion, a National Historic Landmark, has long been the subject of scholarly inquiry. Serious study of the building's environs is more recent. The Woodlands today is an amalgam, reworked over time for individual and institutional uses. During the late-eighteenth century, eminent botanist and plant collector William Hamilton (1745-1813) made the property a New World model of contemporary English gardening techniques. Employing principles advanced by Lancelot Brown, Thomas Whately, and nurserymen such as Nathanial Swinden, he created an elaborate tableau that Thomas Jefferson called "the only rival which I have known in America to what may be seen in England." Some forty years after Jefferson's compliment, the estate underwent a second transformation at the hands of the Woodlands Cemetery Company. Founded in 1840, this venture set out to remake Hamilton's estate in the form of a new metropolitan amenity known as a rural cemetery. Local and national precedent existed for such a project. Like Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts (1831), Woodlands offered private burial plots in a Romantic riverside setting. Still more like Philadelphia's Laurel Hill (1836), the new cemetery occupied the grounds of a former country seat and was administered by a business corporation. But The Woodlands made its own, distinctive contribution to the rural cemetery movement. Aware of the property's history, dramatic topography and proximity to the city, the company's projectors set out to create a landscape as appealing for its genteel associations as for its natural beauty. Hamilton's mansion and aged trees held special significance for lawyer Eli K. Price. As the cemetery's leading advocate and principal public face, he argued that the institution not only met the sanitary, aesthetic, and emotional needs of Philadelphia but also served as the steward of a hallowed place. In time, similar ideas would prove crucial to the establishment of Philadelphia's Fairmount Park. Given Price's central role in that undertaking and his other contributions to public horticulture, The Woodlands arguably emerges as the microcosm of a popularizing process at work in the American landscape. Conceived as a private estate in high English style, it became widely accessible as a sort of proto-park and helped incubate an institution that was truly public in nature. This, at least, is the prevailing interpretation of the site's historical significance. While there is evidence to support such claims, recent research may help relocate Woodland Cemetery within the more private economy of mid-nineteenth-century real estate development.
  • Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N8
  • Survey number: HALS PA-5
Source https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/pa4013.photos.201014p
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain This image or media file contains material based on a work of a National Park Service employee, created as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, such work is in the public domain in the United States. See the NPS website and NPS copyright policy for more information.
Object location39° 57′ 07.99″ N, 75° 09′ 51.01″ W Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

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current08:47, 1 August 2014Thumbnail for version as of 08:47, 1 August 20145,264 × 4,219 (21.18 MB) (talk | contribs)GWToolset: Creating mediafile for Fæ. HABS 31 July 2014 (3000:3200)

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