Outdoors Magazine

Parks: Cornerstones of Civic Revitalization

Posted on the 26 February 2016 by Fopg @fopg

America's Best Idea: Fairsted, the Olmsteds and Our National ParksParks: Cornerstones of Civic Revitalization

The quality of park systems has long been a measure of a healthy and functional society. Our national parks represent a democratic, and increasingly uncommon, commitment to the common good. This talk will focus on how the tradition of public park making initiated by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr.'s seminal Yosemite Report in 1865 continues today as an expression of national and community ideals.

Parks: Cornerstones of Civic Revitalization

Tuesday, April 5, 2016
6:00pm Reception | 7:00pm Lecture
Wheelock College, Brookline Campus
43 Hawes Street, Brookline, MA
Seating is limited and reservations are required.
Reserve online or 617-566-1689, ext. 265

Rolf Diamant is a writer, historian and adjunct associate professor at the University of Vermont's Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources. Rolf enjoyed a 37-year career with the National Park Service as a landscape architect, planner, and park manager. He served as superintendent of Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site and was the first superintendent of Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park, a national park that tells the story of conservation, the evolution of land stewardship and the emergence of a national conservation ethic. As liaison with the National Parks Second Century Commission, he helped re-think the value and function of national parks in a changing world. He is past president of the George Wright Society and his column, "Letter from Woodstock," addressing the future of national parks, appears regularly in the society's journal. Copies of A Thinking Person's Guide to America's National Parks (George Braziller, 2016) edited by Mr. Diamant and others, will be available for sale and signing by the author.

Parks: Cornerstones of Civic Revitalization
A Thinking Person's Guide to America's National Parks is a guidebook like no other. In twenty-three essays, richly illustrated with more than 350 color photographs, authors with personal and professional connections to the national parks share their deep and invaluable knowledge. This book illuminates the astonishing diversity of America's more than 400 national parks, bound together into a single national park system that expresses and preserves the nation's natural, historical, and cultural heritage.


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