Belanger Park River Rouge
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  1. #26

    Default

    All of these features in the parks require two things:

    1. City employees competent to to maintain the plumbing and landscaping.
    2. City employees to whom the word "work" is not a nasty four-letter word.

    You don't get this with fifty years of "friends and family" hiring and staffing practices.

  2. #27

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hermod View Post
    All of these features in the parks require two things:

    1. City employees competent to to maintain the plumbing and landscaping.
    2. City employees to whom the word "work" is not a nasty four-letter word.

    You don't get this with fifty years of "friends and family" hiring and staffing practices.
    Fifty years seems like an odd, even number, Hermod. What happened fifty years ago to prompt the change you mention?

    Also, what was it like before?

  3. #28

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hermod View Post
    All of these features in the parks require two things:

    1. City employees competent to to maintain the plumbing and landscaping.
    2. City employees to whom the word "work" is not a nasty four-letter word.

    You don't get this with fifty years of "friends and family" hiring and staffing practices.
    I think this has more to do with the cost of wages now vs. the 1910s. In the past, people power was cheaper. Even Henry Ford's vaunted $5 a day comes out to about $30K a year in today's dollars, and that was considered the pinnacle of pay scales. Most people worked for a lot less; the people mucking out fountains worked for way less.

  4. #29

    Default

    Back in the day there was a fear that polio was spreading through
    public pools. I can't say if this is the reason why, but I think the
    fountains were taken out well before African American southerners
    become the most prevalent City of Detroit employee ethnic group.

  5. #30

    Default

    Hermod you hit the nail on head. I recall spending a lot of time in the parks as part of my work schedule, getting things done was a major frustration factor. In the early 70's Palmer Park had a casting pond where folks could gone to work on fishing skills. The pond was on the west side of the park near the golf course. During the summer there were some individuals who would be there on Sunday mornings. I got a chance to see some real experts when it came to casting, fly, bait and spin casters. A quiet sport they enjoyed at the pond. It has probably been filled in or removed.

  6. #31

    Default

    Well, here is what happened to Eppinger Pond near the Dearborn Civic Center
    at Michigan and Greenfield Roads:

    http://www.pressandguide.com/article...ewmode=default

  7. #32

    Default

    And this history page on Palmer Park mentions the casting pond, but
    a very nice lake next to it was filled in with debris from the Lodge Freeway
    right before I was born on the same day the ribbon cutting for the Lodge
    Freeway was held outside Crittenton Hospital, right by the Lodge Freeway
    at that time:

    https://peopleforpalmerpark.wordpres...f-palmer-park/
    Last edited by Dumpling; September-03-16 at 04:24 PM. Reason: grammar cleanp

  8. #33

    Default

    And the Phragmites and the pond both have resurfaced. I'd want my money back.

  9. #34

    Default

    Does anyone remember a small hot dog stand at the SE corner of Temple and 2nd? Iwas across the street from the Masonic Temple and the lady who owned it sold pretty good hot dogs, this is in the early 70's. Reading this post brought back some memories, it was a very small restaurant.

  10. #35

    Default

    Thanks everyone for sharing their stories, photos, and opinions

  11. #36

    Default Scripps Park

    It appears that Scripps Park in Woodbridge looked a lot different in the late 1800's to early 1900's than it does now. It contained a library which was originally the mansion of a Mr. and Mrs. George Booth. The park once had a fancy stone-lined cascade and canal running through it as well

    I have exceeded my upload allocation, so a link to the article with photos is below:

    https://cranbrookkitchensink.wordpre...-land-library/
    Last edited by masterblaster; September-06-16 at 02:52 PM. Reason: more info

  12. #37
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Posts
    4,786

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by masterblaster View Post
    It appears that Scripps Park in Woodbridge looked a lot different in the late 1800's to early 1900's than it does now. It contained a library which was originally the mansion of a Mr. and Mrs. George Booth. The park once had a fancy stone-lined cascade and canal running through it as well

    I have exceeded my upload allocation, so a link to the article with photos is below:

    https://cranbrookkitchensink.wordpre...-land-library/
    An image of the library.
    Attached Images Attached Images      

  13. #38
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Posts
    4,786

    Default

    The library from the James Scripps house was moved across Trumbull to the Scripps Library in 1927.
    Attached Images Attached Images  

  14. #39

    Default

    It wouldn't be the first time in Detroit a park..........[[1896)
    Name:  Boulevard Park 1896 Detroit_Free_Press_Thu__Jul_9__1896_.jpg
Views: 362
Size:  128.1 KB

    ....became a subdivision [[1903)
    Name:  Boulevard Park Subdivision - Detroit_Free_Press_Sun__Aug_16__1903_.jpg
Views: 456
Size:  245.4 KB

  15. #40

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gistok View Post
    One has to realize that Grand Circus Park east and west were totally ripped apart in 1955 in order to put underground parking there. Everything was torn out, trees and fountains.

    Only what could be saved [[statuary and some fancy fountainworks) was saved, and reinstalled [[not often at the same location)....
    In Paris they somehow manage to put in multi-level underground parking without disturbing the historic buildings on the site.

  16. #41

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by expatriate View Post
    In Paris they somehow manage to put in multi-level underground parking without disturbing the historic buildings on the site.
    Somehow I think Detroit would have ended up with some sink holes had they tried that. After all soil reacts differently than building foundations. Also... the GCP re-do was 60 years ago. Any innovations for underground parking in a different way of creating them, would likely be do to more recent innovations.

  17. #42

    Default

    From my window I can see that they're ripping out portions of Capitol Park again. Did not notice this earlier today. What do you all think the odds are we'll get more green space, or, dare I say, a water fountain?

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