From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8

Page 9

Page 10

Page 11

Page 12

Page 13

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

Page 17

Page 18

Page 19

Page 20

Page 21

Page 22

Page 23

Page 24

Page 25

Page 26

Page 27

Page 28
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Vint, Thomas C-1894-1967
Vint, Thomas a
1894-1967
Ploneers of American handscape Design.
Eds. C.A. Birnhaum, Robin Karson.
N.Y. llagram Hill, 2000. Pp. 413-416.
VINT, THOMAS CHALMERS
(1894-1967)
landscape architect, park planner, conservationist
Thomas Chalmers Vint was born in Salt Lake City, and
where Hull and Vint shared the offices of architect
grew up in Los Angeles, where he attended Polytechnic
Gilbert Stanley Underwood, who was designing park
High School. Having decided on a career in landscape
lodges for concessionaires. Vint became an assistant land-
architecture, he enrolled at the University of California,
scape engineer in the National Park Service in 1923 and
Berkeley. While in school, Vint worked in the offices of
an associate landscape engineer in 1926. When the office
several Los Angeles landscape architects, architects, and
moved to San Francisco in 1927, he took charge of the
builders, including A. S. Falconer, who was designing bun-
landscape program and soon after was made chief land-
galows for the Southern California Home Builders and
scape architect with responsibility for the location, char-
Standard Building Investment Company, and Dodd,
acter, and quality of construction and planning in all the
a residential architect. For nearly a year he served as an
parks in the system.
assistant to Lloyd Wright, a landscape architect and the
Under Vint, the landscape program of the National
son of Frank Lloyd Wright, who was designing the
Park Service expanded into a single, fully orchestrated
grounds of large residences and laying out residential
process of park planning and development based on nat-
subdivisions. The following summer, he returned to work
uralistic principles of design and an ethic of landscape
for Wright and his new partner, Paul G. Thiene, who were
preservation. Vint developed a highly successful program
preparing landscape designs for several Pasadena suburbs.
to train his staff, assembled from several fields of study
Years later Vint recalled that in Wright's office he had the
and areas of expertise: architects, landscape architect,
opportunity to deal with "every problem from many
engineers, and draftsmen. He coordinated a service-wide
angles" and received "thorough" training and exposure to
program of landscape preservation and harmonization to
the landscape profession. Vint graduated from Berkeley
meet the park service's difficult twofold mission, that
with a B.S. in landscape architecture in 1920, having
parks be both accessible to the public and preserved
spent a semester studying at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts
unimpaired for future generations. His standards for
after serving in Europe during World War I.
locating and designing park roads have had substantial
In 1921 he studied city planning at the University of
influence on highway construction outside the National
California, Los Angeles, and then worked a variety of
Park Service.
short jobs while intermittently accepting contracts to
By July 1929, Vint had transformed the Landscape
grade and plant residential grounds and supervise con-
struction. While working for a Los Angeles construction
company, he learned about the large-scale planting of
trees and shrubs, and as an employee of the architectural
firm of Mayberry & Jones, he observed firsthand the use
of concrete for the construction of hotels, garages, and
hospitals. He briefly headed the landscape office for
Armstrong Nurseries of Ontario, California, advising on
planting designs and supervising planting projects. Vint
also conducted experimental nursery work for the Cali-
fornia Walnut Growers Association at the state's experi-
ment station at Riverside. Vint's early work experience
equipped him with a variety of practical skills that pre-
pared him well for his long career with the National Park
Service.
In November 1922, Vint became an architectural
draftsman in the office of Daniel Ray Hull*, the National
Thomas Vint (middle left) in the Western Field Office,
Park Service's chief landscape engineer, in Yosemite
1928-33. Photo George A. Grant. Courtesy National Park Ser-
National Park. In 1923 the office moved to Los Angeles,
vice Historic Photography Collection.
Division into a design office with an increasing emphasis
proposed improvements for all parks. Dubbed "master
on general planning. The division prepared the architec-
plans" by National Park Service director Horace
tural and landscape plans for government projects under
Albright in 1932, they quickly became the essential
the direction of the park superintendents, reviewed the
tool for all park planning and development. Updated
plans for tourist facilities to be built by the concession-
annually, they guided national park development for
aires and the plans for roads, and prepared the architec-
many years.
tural plans for bridges constructed by the Bureau of
During the 1930s, under the leadership of Vint and
Public Roads. In a 1930 annual report, Vint remarked
his staff, the National Park Service developed an increas-
that the San Francisco office operated much like the
ing number of parks from historic sites, the monuments
usual professional landscape office except that it had
and parkways of Washington, D.C., many other national
"the ideal condition of having park superintendents for
monuments, and national parkways such as the Blue
clients."
Ridge Parkway. The Historic American Building Survey
In the late 1920s, plans were under way for many
was launched under Vint's supervision. As a member of
of the larger parks; by the end of 1931, as a result of the
the editorial committee for Park Structures and Facilities
Economic Stabilization Act, Vint and his staff, in con-
(1935) and Park and Recreation Structures (1938), Vint
junction with park superintendents, had begun plans of
communicated many of his ideas on park planning and
development to state park designers. In 1938 he became
parks. The National Park Service successfully argued for
chief of Planning, supervising 150 to 200 architects, land-
new appropriations, and Congress approved a ten-year
scape architects, and planners in four regional offices and
program of park development and improvements called
"Mission 66." Vint was a member of the steering com-
two field divisions.
World War II brought a rapid end to the CCC and
mittee and headed the initial planning stage; in 1961 he
PWA allocations. Planning, design, and construction in
was made assistant director for Design and Construc-
national parks virtually ceased for the duration of the
tion. Shortly thereafter, Vint retired after almost forty
war. In 1946 master plans were once again revived and
years of federal service.
updated; however, there was little money for construc-
Vint was a Fellow of the American Society of Land-
tion and development.
scape Architects, a Fellow of the American Institute of
By the mid-1950s, burgeoning numbers of park vis-
Architects, and a recipient of the Distinguished Service
itors coupled with inadequate and outdated facilities
Award, the highest civilian honor conferred by the United
raised public concern about the condition of national
States.
Vint and the process of planning and construction that
Carr, Ethan. Wilderness by Design: Landscape Architec-
he had spearheaded since the late 1920s.
ture and the National Park Service. Lincoln: University
of Nebraska Press, 1998. A compilation of case stud-
McClelland, Linda Flint. Building the National Parks: His-
ies highlighting the accomplishments of the land-
toric Landscape Design and Construction. Baltimore:
scape architects of the National Park Service and
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998. History of the
their contributions to American landscape history; a
policies, principles, and practices of landscape design
chapter documents the role of Vint and his staff in
which guided the development and protection of the
coordinating a master plan and designing facilities for
national parks from the founding of the National Park
Mount Rainier National Park.
Service to the end of the twentieth century; several
chapters trace the leading role that Vint played in
Hubbard, Henry V*. "Landscape Development Based on
shaping the design services and planning process from
Conservation." Landscape Architecture 29 (April 1939),
1928 to 1961.
105-121. A comprehensive view of the work of the
National Park Service's Branch of Planning headed by
Linda Flint McClelland
E&AA News and Notes
Tom Vint
Profiles of NPS greats
With this issue of the COURIER we are
launching what we believe will be an
interesting and valuable series of
biographies of men and women now
deceased who over the years of service
made important and lasting
contributions to the work of the National
Park Service.
We are undertaking this series in the
belief that present-day employees of the
Service ought to be better acquainted
with the many and notable
accomplishments of their predecessors,
the people of whom they are the heirs
and to whom they owe much for having
played their parts in making the National
Park Service the great bureau that it has
been for more than 60 years.
On Oct. 26, 1967 death claimed
Jackson Lake Lodge at Grand Teton, The
brought landscape architecture into
Thomas Chalmers Vint in his retirement
Grand Canyon Lodge on the North Rim
collaborative partnership with engineers
city, Tucson, Ariz. Tom, who had a
and the Williamsburg Lodge. The office
of the Public Roads Administration, he
distinguished Park Service career of 39
was removed to Yosemite for a time and
set in motion a trend which continuously
years, was born Aug. 15, 1894, of Scotch-
Tom succeeded Hull as Chief Landscape
improves the face of America as
Irish parents recently arrived in the
Architect in 1927.
thousands of miles of highways,
United States and then living in Salt Lake
The office was again moved, this time
parkways, and turnpike bear the imprint
City. His boyhood was spent in Los
to San Francisco, as was the Engineering
of some landscape architectural
Angeles. After high school, he entered
Division from Portland, Oreg. Together,
considerations.
the University of California at Berkeley
they became known as Western Field
Another facet of Tom's versatile talents
for the study of landscape architecture.
Headquarters. From that time until
was his leadership in programs
His class was interrupted by World War I.
retirement in 1961, Tom held a number
concerned with historic buildings
Tom enlisted, and was commissioned a
of important titles. His philosophy was
preservation and the launching of the
Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps. They
greatly influenced by close early
Historic American Buildings Survey, the
received ground training on campus
association with Steve Mather and
brain-child of Charles E. Peterson. Many
before being shipped to France for flight
Horace Albright, and was passed along to
thousands of structures doomed by
training. One of his classmates was James
those of us fortunate enough to work
changing ownership, obsolescence and
"Jimmy" Doolittle, who achieved fame as
with him. In the fall of 1933 he was
urban change were recorded by
a civilian flyer after the War and further
transferred to Washington, where his
drawings and photographs, and are
fame as an Air Force General in WWII,
experience was needed because of the
available from the Library of Congress.
particularly for Doolittle's Raid on Tokyo.
growing number of System units in the
The biggest monument to Tom Vint's
Tom had little good to say about his Army
East.
pioneering professional career is
experience. While stationed near Lyon,
It would be impossible to single out
probably the large number of men he
France, Tom was able to take enough
Tom's most lasting contribution to the
encouraged and counseled. Many would
architectural courses at the University in
national park concept or to the
have left the profession during the
Lyon to be allowed a semester's credit at
profession of landscape architecture. His
discouraging period of the Great
Berkeley.
key role in pioneering the master-plan
Depression had they not been
Following 1920 graduation, Tom
approach to sound long-range planning
influenced by Tom.
worked several years in the architectural
was certainly one monument to his
Perhaps mentioning traits would clarify
office of Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles. In
career. A large number of first-edition
Tom's personality for later Service
1922 Tom went to work as assistant
master plans were 'unveiled' at the 1932
employees.
landscape architect in the National Park
Superintendent's Conference at Hot
Personality: Modest (sometimes shy),
Service, under the late Daniel R. Hull.
Springs, Ark. Of equal and continuing
informal, good-natured, happiest when
They had rented space in the Los Angeles
importance would be his contribution to
attired in outing clothes suited to Alaska
architectural office of Gilbert Stanley
highway and parkway standards of
or Africa.
Underwood, the concessioner's architect
location and design. Co-author of the
As a raconteur: Not a prolific story
for the Ahwanee Hotel, Yosemite, the
inter-bureau agreement which first
(Continued on page 24.)
23
teller by NPS standards, but had a couple
tongue-in-cheek. "Spare no expense to
Africa, and traveled in Kenya, Uganda,
he loved to tell under the right social
keep it simple"; "One honest crook is
Zanzibar and South Africa.
stimulation. One, in particular, was the
worth a thousand self-righteous
After returning to Tucson, Tom
funnier by his getting SO tickled at the
hypocrites"; "Lack of bad habits can be
answered the call to duty: road projects
telling. It went like this: "Know what the
hazardous to your health. Almost every
in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
ram said as he fell cliff? I didn't
person will some day have a serious
needed close supervision and Tom and
see that ewe turn!
illness and need something to give his
Mary went to Hawaii. Illness toward the
As a speaker: Avoided public speaking
system an extra lift. Those who have no
end of this assignment required Tom's
like the plague. No one ever got him on a
habits will be unable to give up anything,
hospitalization in Hilo and subsequent
radio program or before a TV camera.
and are doomed."
return to Tucson.
Favorite speech was at the close of
Some of the honors bestowed upon
Tom and Mary had two sons, Robert
meetings-"I move we adjourn."
Tom were: (a) Elected Fellow, American
and Thomas. Both are married, and
As a versatile smoker: Tom loved
Society of Landscape Architects, 1948,
Robert has 5 children.
anything from Corona cigars to hand-
and Fellow, American Institute of
Tom and Mary both passed away in
rolled cigarettes to corn-cob pipes.
Architects, 1961, only man in the USA
1973.
As a brittle-bones: Tom's first fracture
elected Fellow of both. (b) Recipient of a
The 28th Session of the Albright
was a leg broken in Carlsbad Caverns,
Rockefeller Medal bestowed annually
Training Center was named in his honor
this before the elevators were running,
upon 10 outstanding career persons in
in December, 1968. As was said with
requiring a carry-out operation of several
the Federal Service. (c) Recipient, NPS
respect to Steve Mather, there is no end
miles by stretcher, Tom then weighing a
Distinguished Service Award, 1952. (d)
to the good that Tom Vint did. For his
bit over 200 lbs. A few years later he fell
Recipient of Pugsley Gold Medal
genial, firm and competent grip was on
from a tree in Bandelier while on a road
presented annually by the American
the development tiller back in the
survey, suffering further fractures. The
Scenic and Historic Preservation Society.
formative days when the pattern was
third time happened at Colorado
The retirement of Tom Vint to Tucson,
being set.
National Monument.
Ariz., in 1961, did not end his
As a philosopher: Tom had several
professional endeavors. He accepted an
-William G. Carnes
favorite sayings, put forth with some
appointment to study national parks in
Kowski tourney in D.C.
Alumni sports note
alumni editor served as official
Chalk up another first for the NPS.
photographer
Immediately preceding WW II, the
Everybody came to the games-
Divisions of Land Planning and State
mammas, pappas, aunts, uncles, kids and
Cooperation, WASO, headed by
cousins, clerks and executives. There was
Assistant Director Connie Wirth, and the
beer, picnic lunches, sunburn and
regional office at Richmond, led by Herb
chiggers. It was a hell of a lot of fun.
Evison, used to play an annual softball
The war terminated this thrilling rivalry
game, usually at a neutral field in a State
but the memories remain. They haven't
park between the two cities.
seen slo pitch like it since.
Slo or soft pitch softball, now the rage
-Fred Morrell.
in many metropolitan areas, was born in
Alumnus Bullock
the course of these contests. Not
intended that way, slo emerged because
gets award
neither Connie, the Washington hurler,
Director Dickenson on the golf course.
nor Herb, his counterpart for Richmond,
Referring to him as "distinguished
The Washington, D.C., segment of the
could throw hard enough to explode a
pioneer in restoration architecture," the
6th annual Frank Kowski Golf
soap bubble. Considering their
Cecil (Md.) Whig of May 28 carried a 3-
Tournament for the benefit of the E&AA
supporting casts, they pitched with great
column story on Orin M. Bullock, on the
Educational Trust Fund plans to have a
courage and faith.
occassion of his receipt of the State of
star participant when it kicks off Sept. 5.
The scores were horrendous since the
Maryland's highest award for historic
None other than Director Russell E.
fielding was on a par with the pitching.
preservation accomplishment. In
enson will try the links to boost NPS
Some worthies who displayed their
ceremonies held at Annapolis, he was
kids scholarships. "And, he's been
inconsiderable skills in their epic
one of three recipients of the Calvert
practicing, too," according to Dave
struggles (besides Connie and Herb)
Prize, instituted in 1976 by the Maryland
Gackenbach, area coordinator.
were, Freddie Johnston, later
Historical Trust.
The D.C. area tourney will be held at
superintendent at Hawaii Volcanoes
During the heyday of the Franklin D.
the Woodlawn Country Club in beautiful
National Park; Neil "Dynamite"
Roosevelt administration, Bullock served
downtown Mt. Vernon, Va. Advance pre-
Butterfield, landscape architect; the late
as regional architect in the Region One
registration should be made b Aug. 29,
Howard "Hank" Greenberg, the NPS
Office in Richmond. Previously he had
and all are invited-golfers non-golfers,
chief safety officer; Tommie Sullivan,
been director of architectural research
spouses and friends, and of course, NPS
now a scout for the Washington Redskins
for Colonial Williamsburg. He has now
employees. According to Gackenbach,
football team; Jake Heugstler, who went
for many years been a leader, on a
there will be numerous local prizes in
on to become a swimming and wrestling
national scale, in historic restoration
addition to the big Nationwide honors.
coach at Catholic University; Jim
activities; his most popular project has
"The Director hopes to see a big
Stephenson; Merv Van Dyke, and Paul
been direction of the restoration of the
turnout for the tourney to support this
Green, now a top amateur golfer in the
historic Rodgers Tavern, in Perryville,
worthy cause," according to
D.C. area; Sam Alu, Howard Chittick,
Md. He is a resident of Rising Sun, Md.
Gackenbach.
yours truly Rowe Morrell, and many
Fore!
other sterling jocks. Jim Kieley, COURIER
-Herb Evison.
24
National Park Service: Biography (Thomas Vint)
Page 1 of 2
National Park Service: The First 75
Years
Biographical Vignettes
Thomas Vint
1894-1967
by Mary Shivers Culpin
For nearly 40 years, Thomas Vint played a major role in
the physical development of the national parks and
monuments. His influence began during the infancy of a
defined park architecture program through the beginning
of the Mission 66 period. The 1920 University of
California graduate studied for a time at the Ecole de
Architecture, University of Lyon, France. His National
Park Service career began in 1923 as a draftsman
working under the well-known rustic architects Gilbert
Stanley Underwood and Herbert Maier in Yosemite
National Park. In 1927 he assumed the chief landscape
architect's position and remained in command of
landscape architecture and architecture for the National
Park Service until his retirement in the 1960s.
Vint began his National Park Service career at a very
challenging time. The late 1920s and early 1930s were
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/sontag/vint.htm
2/8/2008
National Park Service: Biography (Thomas Vint)
Page 2 of 2
times of extensive construction of roads, housing, visitor
lodging, and campgrounds. Assembling a staff of fine,
creative landscape architects and architects, Vint instilled
the philosophy of harmonizing the buildings or structures
with the environment. Vint co-authored an agreement
with the Bureau of Public Roads in which the bureau
supplied the technical documents and the construction of
major road projects, and the National Park Service
provided the landscaping design and details. He also
developed the idea of Master Plans for parks, which
provided comprehensive planning for all important
phases of planning, design, and construction. Vint took a
major role in the organization of the Historic American
Building Survey sponsored by the National Park Service,
the Library of Congress, and the American Institute of
Architects to preserve a record of buildings important in
American history. Toward the end of his career, he
demonstrated far-sighted leadership as chairman of the
Steering Committee in developing Mission 66. At many
parks or monuments today, Thomas Vint's influence can
still be seen in the fine rustic buildings or bridges or,
more subtly, in the manner in which the developed areas
blend with the environment.
From National Park Service: The First 75 Years
History I Links to the Past I National Park Service I Search Contact
Top
Last Modified: Dec 1 2000 10:00:00 pm PDT
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/sontag/vint.htm
ParkNet
National Park Service
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/sontag/vint.htm
2/8/2008
HFC 232
THE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT AND FUNCTIONS OF
OUR NATIONAL PARKS
by
Thomas C. Vint,
Chief Landscape Architect,
National Park Service.
Dates
"Why gild the lily?" is a well-worn question that arises in the
early stages of many a discussion involving a development program in our
national parks. It is a good question and a helpful one. It asks, "Didn't
nature: do well enough?"; "Didn't history do the right thing?", "Can these
places be improved upon?", "Why develop them?" It is a good question for
it expresses briefly - perhaps a bit bluntly, the reasoning behind the
policy under which our national parks and allied areas are administered.
These areas were set aside and designated National Parks, National
Monuments, National Historic Sites, each one for a specific reason and
purpose. They contain the great examples of our natural scenery and the
places that mark important moments in the Nation's history. Nature gave
us those in one category and history left us those in the other. They
are the treasured items of our national heritage. They have been selected
and set aside with the admonition that they be preserved for the enjoyment
of the people of this and future generations.
This means that preservation and protection is of primary importance.
In itself this is a relatively simple matter. How to. reconcile this with
how they are to be used "for the enjoyment of this and future generations"
brings the problems. Lock them up on one hand, wear them out on the other.
This has been met by excluding such commercial exploitation as lumbering,
mining and grazing. Their use is limited to that of providing for the
visitor who, comes to see and appreciate them. Recreation in its usual sense
is not provided. The vacationer who seeks a resort where he will find such
sports as golf and swimming will not find them in the national parks. He
who seeks to see America and the great things it has will find them just
as he might on a European trip see Mont Blanc, the Coliseum, the Fjords,
and Waterloo. Here he will see the Grand Canyon, the Giant Forest, Jamestown
Island, and Gettysburg. He will enjoy the experience of seeing and being
in the presence of the great things of nature and the great places of his-
-tory. The American citizen or the visitor from abroad who experiences
these things experiences America,
The development program of these areas therefore is largely one that
provides for the visitor. His use in turn is limited. He is not allowed
-to hunt nor carry away fragments as souvenirs. The area is made reasonably
accessible to him by roads and trails. Transportation; if the does not use
his own automobile or his feet, is available by bus and saddle horse. Assist-
ance is given him. to. interpret and appreciate the principal features and
Published by the Philosophical Library of New York in its Symposium
of October, 1944, on "New Architecture and City Planning."
their significance through museums, signs and pamphlets. Meal service
and overnight accommodations are provided when it is not practical to
obtain these elsewhere. For example, Yellowstone, Glacier and Sequoia
National Parks are large areas and too remote from facilities available
outside the park, making it necessary to provide hotels, camps, etc.,
within the park. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Fort McHenry
and Muir Woods National Monuments are of the other type; outside overnight
facilities serve them adequately. On the other hand, such facilities could
no doubt be made profitable if the policy were one that promoted develop-
ment.
The emphasis given above to limitations of use might lead one to
think the method of meeting planning problems in national parks is to
dispose of them; regulate them out of existence. Actually, these are
measures first to protect the parks and the features that gave them im-
portance, then to provide for the visitor who comes to enjoy them for
what they are. They single out the purpose of the parks.
With all these points that may tend to reduce the planning problems
to a simple minimum, one great variable prevails - the habits of the
travelling public. No sooner are these accommodated than new ones appear.
Until about 1915 national parks were reached largely by railroad. Within
the park travel was by horse-drawn stage, horseback or afoot. In those
days a visit to a national park was an important event in a lifetime. The
visitor took ten days or more to see the Yellowstone, three days to a week
for Crater Lake. It was a large undertaking, an adventure. A consider-
able expenditure of money was involved. The number of visitors in a season
was relatively small.
The accommodations were simple. There were but few rooms with bath
in the hotels. In most of the rooms the pitcher and basin prevailed. In
many localities sleeping accommodations were provided in tents. The Ameri-
can Plan prevailed; one bought his ticket to and thru the park, meals and
berth included, much as he would steamer ticket. All visitors had their
meals in the same dining room, wrote letters in the same lobby and gathered
around the fire in the evening. This made a common datum for all visitors
which did much to make a trip to and around the park something of the same
experience to all who came.
Park travel became motorized about 1915. The private auto put in its
appearance. The motor soon replaced the horse on the stage lines. Yellow-
stone became a five-day trip, Crater Lake, one day. In 1922 the private
auto carried about one percent of the visitors.
It was not long following World War I that the automobile changed
from a rich man's luxury to the poor man's transportation. This had a far-
reaching effect on national parks. Travel increased by leaps and bounds.
About the same number of people came to Yellowstone during the five-year
period 1922 - 1927 as did in the fifty-year period 1872 - 1922. The man
who could devote a month of his year to travel undertook to see several
2
parks; whereas, ten and twenty years before he saw but one. The man
who crossed the continent for business or pleasure could include a na-
tional park by adding a day or two to his schedule.
On the other hand, the fellow with a good pair of hiking shoes, an
extra pair of SOX and the Daniel Boone impulses to penetrate the wild
country hasn't changed. His needs are about the same as before the auto.
Unfortunately, he hasn't increased in numbers. He makes a smaller per-
centage of the total visitors. There are ample trails for him and his
follower, the man who rides a horse. Both get the most out of a visit
to a park.
The great increase in motor travel required that the early wagon
roads be changed to motor roads. They were widened to two-way travel
and given a dustless surface. Mountain roads changed to two-way roads,
brought numerous projects that in the earlier years would be called en-
gineering feats. They are conspicuous; have necessarily brought forth
many irreparable scars, and are an incongruous note in the protection and
preservation of natural conditions in these areas. These scars exist in
spite of all the care, effort and expense that has been used to reduce
the effect of these intrusions. They exist at the expense of the park
landscape, although the road systems in each park are restricted and make
only a limited portion of the park accessible. Large superlative natural
areas are accessible only by trails. Motor roads have been the means of
allowing great numbers of people to see these outstanding areas. It
is
reasonable to argue that the same number of people could not have seen
the parks and do less damage by other means of travel than the motor
car,
together with its oiled two-way road. Perhaps the motor car should not
have been admitted, this would have meant that only a small fraction of
those who have been to them could have seen them. It cannot be denied
that those who did get there would have seen them in a better way. The
last prewar year brought more than 20,000,000 visitors, the majority with-
in the short vacation season of 90 - 120 days.
The automobile and its increased numbers brought changes in the
visitor accommodations. Larger units at fewer locations resulted from
the faster roads and better engines. Some hotels were abandoned, others
grew larger. Plumbing and electricity were provided in more and more
rooms. The cabin replaced the tent; the automobile campground provided
for the man with his own tent and frying pan. Then the trailer made its
appearance. Many are the types of experience to be gained from a trip to
a national park in recent years in comparison to the single experience
provided in the horse-drawn stage days.
How will the postwar traveller move? The motor car will develop
farther. The railroads will develop new methods. The airplane will no
doubt bring the greatest change in any one field of locomotion. Global
war may develop global tourists. One thing is certain, the decade follow-
ing the war will develop different travel habits from the decade before
the war.
3
How will these effect the development of national parks? Travel
habits will have much to say. It seems that roads and trails will con-
tinue to serve as the principal means of getting about to see the parks.
These may be supplemented by airplane sightseeing trips. The greatest
change is likely to be in how the park is reached, more than what happens
after arrival.
Today the airplane is excluded. Neither regulations nor facilities
provide for it. Should the regulations be changed, it is not likely that
airports with their mile-long runways and 40-1 glide-angle approaches will
develop within park boundaries. Topography will not permit it. There is
not enough level ground. The nearest large airport will have to serve,
using the automobile or bus from airport to the park. The helicopter type
of air taxi suggests the one place the airplane will materially affect
national park development plans. Not enough is known of how it has ad-
vanced during the war to venture into the possibilities at this writing.
The automobile brought into being a new development - the parkways.
These were originally developed in Metropolitan areas for traffic reasons.
When an important road reached the saturation point a second artery was
developed to carry passenger car traffic - frontage rights were eliminated,
access was limited, and a wide right of way provided, which made an elongat-
ed park for the roadway to pass through.
National parkways have come into being for park reasons and are not
essential parts of the national traffic system. These elongated parks
are selected to unfold a region to the traveller. The traffic seeks them
for what they are, to travel and to see the elongated park as they would
any other park. The frontage rights are eliminated, access is limited,
and the wide right of way is provided. Where desirable the right of way
is enlarged to include wayside parks to give emphasis to some specific
features.
National parkways are selected to protect and display natural features
or historical features or a combination of both. The same underlying
principles - apply as in national parks - protection and preservation - yet
making provision for the visitor to enjoy them. The development policy can
be more liberal, with less restrictions for the visitor than in a national
park. The national parkway fits the more developed sections of the coun-
try in that it utilizes less ground to include important works of nature
or places of history. They do not have the large natural areas of untouched
lands or virgin forests of the national parks. The roadway is a prominent
feature. They are the motorists' parks. They represent a type of develop-
ment that came with the motor age. They are new. Their future depends
on wise application and the attitude of the traveller. They are closely
related to the future of the automobile.
National Historical Parks, National Historic Monuments, and National
Historic Sites include the places that are important in the history of
the country. Fundamentally, the same reasoning applies as in the natural
4
parks; protection, preservation, and making them available to the visitor.
In practice the thing to be preserved is the picture at the time - an
attempt is made to stop the clock, nature is not permitted to take its
course. For example, the scene of Pickett's charge at Gattysburg is lost
if nature takes its course and the field is allowed to grow up into woods.
At the historic time it was a farmer's field. Today it is preserved as
a farmer's field and is cropped by a farmer.
Historic buildings are preserved. A decade ago restoration was a
keynote. The trend now is to protect the original and let the visitor
make his mental restoration. Many of these can be as accurate as the best
restoration that can be provided. The theme today is "Better to preserve
than repair, better repair than restore, better restore than construct.
So much for the reasoning that lies underneath the planning of the
development of national parks and allied areas. The mechanics of planning
them is provided in a well established procedure. There is a Master Plan
for each park which guides the development. It governs all construction
and maintenance work that make's a change no matter how large or how small
the project. All effort is applied in the same direction toward the final
result.
A Master Plan consists of a series of drawings and written statements.
These include an inventory of what is in the park and a statement of policy
and objectives as to how the park is to be used. Finally, it includes
plans showing the general location and scope of facilities to be provided.
The plans may give emphasis to what is not to be done. The plans
are progressive, that is they are revised regularly as new problems arise
and new data is available, Planning is a continuous process rather than
finding a fixed diagram and calling planning finished business.
The war stopped all development in national parks. Besides fitting
the nation's war effort, this gave the parks a well earned breathing spell.
Much was done in the way of development in the past decade. Park work
fitted well into the unemployment relief programs.
Planning effort - like construction - has been reduced but still is
alive, while construction is at a complete standstill.
The Master Plans being kept current and flexible enough to adjust to
new conditions stand ready to meet postwar needs: The development program
provides, when construction is renewed, for resumption where it left off.
This does not mean to assume that the same plans will suffice, and that
postwar needs are the same as prewar. It means the program is large enough
to. select work for the first years that is reasonably certain to stay.
Roads that have been begun will be completed. These are few. For the most
part, existing roads will be resurfaced, bridges and guard rail will be
built. New roads will not be undertaken until trends are tried and the
need tested to see if postwar conditions demand them. Likewise, buildings
5
such as warehouses and repair shops will be in high priority. New museums
and other public use facilities will be considered after those under way
are completed.
The postwar program for an individual park is rather meager. It is
on the conservative side. Putting the programs of 168 areas including
national parks, national monuments, historical parks, historical monuments
and parkways together makes a sizeable total. Reducing the estimates to
dollars and cents there is a ten-year program of $7,500,000 a year for
roads and trails in the parks and monuments, which varies from completing
the Tioga road in Yosemite to a parking area at Salem Maritime National
Historic Site; $10,000,000 a year for parkways, including the Blue Ridge,
Natchez Trace, George Washington, and Olympic; $4,000,000 a year for such
physical improvements as buildings and water or sewer systems. This pro-
gram provides for replacement of many facilities that were built in the
days of the horse-drawn stage; others that were hurriedly built on a tem-
porary basis to meet rapidly changing conditions, for carrying to completion
facilities begun in recently established areas, and some allowance for
areas yet to be established.
The National Park System while well developed through a rapid growth
in the past 20 years, needs some carefully chosen additions to round it
out. There are under study a number of prospective additions, both nat-
ural and historical. These will come as time and study dictate. Some
boundary adjustments in existing areas will come. The program here will
be more one of rounding out the system rather than branching out into
new types. The pattern is set.
Closely related is the completion of land acquisition within the
existing boundaries. There is still much privately owned land within the
existing parks. Its elimination is a slow process, an unpleasant one;
hence, little incentive to gain the necessary support, yet in the aggre-
gate it amounts to purchasing a national park (within the boundaries of
existing parks) - as large as the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Development problems depend much upon the visitors' habits. The
important thing ahead is to save the parks for the people. In many in-
stances the problem is to save the parks from the people themselves.
For
example, how many people should be allowed in the park a' one time? It
is a strange situation in a public area. We are taught that public places
welcome all who come. A brief analysis will show that limiting the number
who may be in the park at one time will not make a general hardship. It
means putting a ceiling on the peak loads. This in turn may mean that on
15 to 30 days of the usual 90-day tourist season a reservation will be
necessary in order that those who do come will find a spot to park the
car - a place to get a meal - a room to sleep in or a place to pitch the
tent. There is also the economic side of the question. How can the
cost of accommodations be kept down if more than a reasonable percentage
of the facilities are used but fifteen days a year? Primarily the prob-
lem is one of not building to accommodate peak loads but trying to spread
the peak load.
6
Postwar plans for the National Parks amount to a continuation from
the point where prewar plans left off. There are no flamboyant schemes
to be put into effect, no grandiose dreams to be carried out. There is
no reason for them. When a man rebuilds his house he may provide for
more abundant living and the realization of dreams, Not so the trophy
room, which protects and preserves his treasured articles. Likewise,
the nation may rebuild its cities, develop new transportation systems,
etc., , but the problem of the national parks is essentially the same, to
protect the treasured items of our national heritage.
In these great areas the landscape architect and the architect must
approach their problems with humility, In the natural areas the land-
scape work is done, the landscape architect is in the position of placing
intrusions (for human convenience) in the natural picture, knowing full
well the landscape will be less perfect when he is through. The architect
must subdue his design that the work of man will not attempt to dominate
that of nature. Likewise, in historical areas they must endeavor to let
the past dominate the present. Their task is a delicate one.
2/10/44.
7
5938
FirstSearch: Detailed Record
Page 1 of 1
Detailed Record
Terms & Conditions
OO
© 1992-2003 OCLC
LC
Click on a checkbox to mark a record to be e-mailed or printed in Marked Records.
H
?
WorldCat results for: au: Vint and au: Thomas.
Subjects Libraries E-mail
Print
Export
Help
Record 1 of 8
1
Mark:
Prev
Next
Parks master plans /
Thomas C Vint
1940-1949?
English
Book [18] p. : ill., maps ; 23 cm.
[S.I. : s.n.,
Ownership: Check the catalogs in your library.
Libraries that Own Item: 6
More Like This: Search for versions with same title and author I Advanced options
Title: Parks master plans /
Author(s): Vint, Thomas C.
Corp Author(s): National Park Service.
Publication: [S.I. : s.n.,
Year: 1940-1949?
Description: [18] p. : ill., maps ; 23 cm.
Language: English
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: National parks and reserves -- United States.
Note(s): Title from cover. / Caption title: National Park Service master plans.
Class Descriptors: Geographic: 3700
Other Titles: National Park Service master plans.
Responsibility: [by Thomas C. Vint]
Document Type: Book
Entry: 19850722
Update: 19950316
Accession No: OCLC: 12291131
Database: WorldCat
?
WorldCat results for: au: Vint and au: Thomas.
Subjects Libraries E-mail
Print
Export
Help
Record 1 of 8
http://newfirstsearch.oclc.org/WebZ/FSFETCH?fetchtypc=fullrecord:sessionid=sp0lsw01-60464-dao... numrecs= 1/7/2003
Thomas Chalmers Vint
Page 1 of 3
Thomas Chalmers Vint (1894-1967) was Chief of the Design and Construction Division of the National Park Service
when he was awarded the Pugsley meal in 1955. Prior to his appointment to this responsible position, he was promoted
through successive positions to Chief Landscape Architect in charge of landscape and architectural design and
construction throughout the National Park Service. He joined the Park Service in 1923 as a landscape architect in
Yosemite National Park, following three years in practice with architects in Los Angeles.
Mr. Vint was as responsible as any one man at that time for the development of the areas comprising the National Park
System in such manner that while they provide for public use, they remain essentially unspoiled "for the enjoyment of
future generations," in accordance with the directive contained in the Act of Congress establishing the Service.
One of the little known but highly important developments of 1933 was the establishment of the Historic American
Buildings Survey under Mr. Vint's supervision. The HABS, as it was familiarly known, obtained measured drawings
and photographs of more than 2800 historic buildings throughout the country; also recorded by photographs alone were
an additional 3500 buildings. This survey is one of the outstanding contributions in the conservation of historic
buildings conceived and executed in this country.
In 1952 the Department of the Interior conferred on Mr. Vint its Distinguished Service Award for outstanding ingenuity
and resourcefulness in solving architectural and engineering problems in the Park Service, and for leadership and
unswerving integrity for a period of more than thirty years of continuous service.
Vint was born in Salt Lake City, and grew up in Los Angeles, where he attended Polytechnic High School. Having
decided on a career in landscape architecture, he enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley. While in school,
Vint worked in the offices of several Los Angeles landscape architects, architects, and builders, including A. S.
Falconer, who was designing bungalows for the Southern California Home Builders and Standard Building Investment
Company, and W.J. Dodd, a residential architect. For nearly a year he served as an assistant to Lloyd Wright, a
landscape architect and the son of Frank Lloyd Wright, who was designing the grounds of large residences and laying
out residential subdivisions. The following summer, he returned to work for Wright and his new partner, Paul G.
Thiene, who were preparing landscape designs for several Pasadena suburbs. Years later Vint recalled that in Wright's
office he had the opportunity to deal with "every problem from many angles" and received "thorough" training and
exposure to the landscape profession. Vint graduated from Berkeley with a B.S. in landscape architecture in 1920,
having spent a semester studying at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts after serving in Europe during World War I.
In 1921 he studied city planning at the University of California, Los Angeles, and then worked a variety of short jobs
while intermittently accepting contracts to grade and plant residential grounds and supervise construction. While
working for a Los Angeles construction company, he learned about the large-scale planting of trees and shrubs, and as
an employee of the architectural firm of Mayberry & Jones, he observed firsthand the use of concrete for the
construction of hotels, garages, and hospitals. He briefly headed the landscape office for Armstrong Nurseries of
Ontario, California, advising on planting designs and supervising planting projects. Vint also conducted experimental
nursery work for the California Walnut Growers Association at the state's experiment station at Riverside. Vint's early
work experience equipped him with a variety of practical skills that prepared him well for his long career with the
National Park Service.
In November 1922, Vint became an architectural draftsman in the office of Daniel Ray Hull, the National Park Service's
chief landscape engineer, in Yosemite National Park. In 1923 the office moved to Los Angeles, where Hull and Vint
shared the offices of architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood, who was designing park lodges for concessionaires. Vint
became an assistant landscape engineer in the National Park Service in 1923 and an associate landscape engineer in
1926. When the office moved to San Francisco in 1927, he took charge of the landscape program and soon after was
made chief landscape architect with responsibility for the location, character, and quality of construction and planning
in all the parks in the system.
Under Vint, the landscape program of the National Park Service expanded into a single, fully orchestrated process of
park planning and development based on naturalistic principles of design and an ethic of landscape preservation. Vint
developed a highly successful program to train his staff, assembled from several fields of study and areas of expertise:
architects, landscape architect, engineers, and draftsmen. He coordinated a service-wide program of landscape
preservation and harmonization to meet the park service's difficult twofold mission, that parks be both accessible to the
public and preserved unimpaired for future generations. His standards for locating and designing park roads have had
http://www.rpts.tamu.edu/Pugsley/Vint.htm
1/13/2003
Thomas Chalmers Vint
Page 2 of 3
substantial influence on highway construction outside the National Park Service.
By July 1929, Vint had transformed the Landscape Division into a design office with an increasing emphasis on general
planning. The division prepared the architectural and landscape plans for government projects under the direction of the
park superintendents, reviewed the plans for tourist facilities to be built by the concessionaires and the plans for roads,
and prepared the architectural plans for bridges constructed by the Bureau of Public Roads. In a 1920 annual report,
Vint remarked that the San Francisco office operated much like the usual professional landscape office except that it had
"the ideal condition of having park superintendents for clients."
In the last 1920s, plans were under way for many of the larger parks; by the end of 1931, as a result of the Economic
Stabilization Act, Vint and his staff, in conjunction with park superintendents, had begun plans of proposed
improvements for all parks. Dubbed "master plans" by National Park Service director Horace Albright in 1932, they
quickly became the essential tool for all park planning and development. Updated annually, they guided national park
development for many years.
During the 1930s, under the leadership of Vint and his staff, the National Park Service developed an increasing number
of parks from historic sites, the monuments and parkways of Washington, D.C., many other national monuments, and
national parkways such as the Blue Ridge Parkway. The Historic American Building Survey was launched under Vint's
supervision. As a member of the editorial committee for Park Structures and Facilities (1935) and Park and Recreation
Structures (1938), Vint communicated many of his ideas on park planning and development to state park designers. In
1928 he became chief of Planning, supervising 150 to 200 architects, landscape architects, and planners in four regional
offices and two field divisions.
World War II brought a rapid end to the CCC and PWA allocations. Planning, design, and construction in national
parks virtually ceased for the duration of the war. In 1946 master plans were once again revived and updated; however,
there was little money for construction and development.
By the mid-1950s, burgeoning numbers of park visitors coupled with inadequate and outdated facilities raised public
concern about the condition of national parks. The National Park Service successfully argued for new appropriations,
and Congress approved a ten-year program of park development and improvements called "Mission 66." Vint was a
member of the steering committee and headed the initial planning stage; in 1961 he was made assistant director for
Design and Construction. Shortly thereafter, Vint retired after almost forty years of federal service.
Vint was a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects, a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects,
and a recipient of the Distinguished Service Award, the highest civilian honor conferred by the United States.
Source: McClelland, Linda Flint. (2000). Vint, Thomas Chalmers. In Charles Birnbaum and Robin Karson Pioneers of
American Landscape Design. McGraw Hill, pp. 413-416.
Sources used by McClelland.
Car, Ethan. Wilderness by Design: Landscape Architecture and the National Park Service. Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press, 1998. A compilation of case studies highlighting the accomplishments of
the landscape architects of the National Park Service and their contributions to American landscape
history; a chapter documents the role of Vint and his staff in coordinating a master plan and designing
facilities for Mount Rainier National Park.
Hubbard, Henry V. "Landscape Development Based on Conservation." Landscape Architecture 29 (April
1939), 105-121. A comprehensive view of the work of the National Park Service's Branch of Planning
headed by Vint and the process of planning and construction that he had spearheaded since the late
1920s.
McClelland, Linda Flint. Building the National Parks: Historic Landscape Design and Construction.
Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1998. History of the policies, principles, and practices of
landscape design which guided the development and protection of the national parks from the founding
of the National Park Service to the end of the twentieth century; several chapters trace the leading role
http://www.rpts.tamu.edu/Pugsley/Vint.htm
1/13/2003
C. /: Vint
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. and Acadia National Park
From the time that John D. Rockefeller, Jr. first bought property on Mt. Desert
Island in acquiring the Eyrie at Seal Marbor in 1910*, until his death in 1960,
Mr. Rockofeller maintained a most onthusiastic and activo interest in the island
and in the developments that led to the formation of Acadia National Park. His
first small gift of $100 in 1911, to help purchase land as public reservation, led
to gifts of land totalling more than 11,300 acros at a cost of more then $1,000,000.
He built some 51 miles of beautifully constructed carriage roads for the Park cost*
ing roughly $2,000,000. He contributed substantially to the Park system of motor
roads; and for buildings, bridges, forestry and planting gave at least another
$1,000,000. After the disastrous fire of 1947, be gave $500,000 for cleanup and
reconstruction.
Mr. Rockofeller's interest was a very strong personal one. "I think I have always
had an eye for nature," he wrote; "because I was brought up in the woods I have
always loved the trees, the rocks, the hills and the valleys." He believe that
National Parks should offer the public "arcas of such outstanding interest in them-
selves that they tell their own story if only they are made reasonable accessible."
Mr. Rockefellcr himself actually developed the general plan for the present Park
as it is today.
As a summer resident of Mt. Decert Island, Mr. Rockefeller came to know every part
of the island intimately, all of its physical geography and natural beauty. As
he wrote, it is "one of the greatest views in the world. 11 In a letter to Harold
Ickes, Secretary of the Interior in 1935, he outlined the essence of his vision for
the ioland and its Park:
"When Acadia National Park was established, it consisted only of mountain tops of
Mount Desert Island (the Monts Deserts mentioned by Champlain when he saw them in
1604 giving the island its name). Thus the Park area at the outset was not access-
ible to any highway and was traversed only by foot trails. Believing that it should
ultimately extend to the ocean on one side and to Frenchman's Bay on the other, and
that access to it would be desirable not only for podestrians but, in carefully
chosen areas for lovers of horses as well as automobiles, I bagan years ago buying
lands on the Island having in mind to make possible the rounding out of Park bound-
aries and its extencions and developments as above outlined."
The actual start toward Acadia National Park began before Mr. Rockefeller's arrival
as a landowner, In 1901 a small group of long time summer residents of the island
met to form a corporation to acquire and "hold reservations at points of interest
on this Island, for the perpetual uso of the public." In 1903 this group, The
Haneock County Trustees of Public Reservations, received its charter from the Maine
Legislature (President-Charles W. Eliot, Vice Procident=Goorge B. Dorr, Secretary-
L. B. Deasy, Treasurer-Goorge L. Stebbins.)
In 1914 the Hancock Trustoes offered their lands to the Federal Government under the
National Monuments Act. Though they had acquired over 5,000 acros they were not ablo
to meet Government legal requirements for acceptance, However, on July 8, 1916,
Mr. Rockefeller first took his family to Maine in 1908 for the sunner, ronting the
Scars Cottage in Weymouth Lane in Bar Harbor.
1
resident Wilson created the Siour do Monto National Monument, with Goorgo Dorr as
Custodian. The Monument, in 1919, becane Lafayette National Park, the first nation-
al park in the country east of the Mississippi Rivor and the first to be acquired by
the gift of land to the government.
Finally, in 1929, a Congressional Bill changed the name of the Park to Acadia and
authorized the Secretary of the Interior to accept gifts of land beyond Mt. Desert
Island on the mainland.
The active personal participation by John D. Rock:efeller, Jr. may be dated from
1915. In that year the executive connittee of the Hancock Trustees passed a resol-
ution authorizing Mr. Rockefeller to begin constructing roads on their lands. In
1915 and 1916 Mr. Rockofoller made his first substantial contribution, in two
pledges, which enabled the Trustees to complete the Reservation's tract for accept-
ance by the Government as a National Monument, a total payment made to George Dorr
of $34,500.
From the Federal Government's acceptance in 1916 Mr. Rockofellor began to play an
important role in almost every aspect of Acadia National Park's development.
His procedure was to buy property personally, which he then deeded to the government.
His land acquisition was pointed toward definito objectivos=a workable unit at a
time in which the boundaries were studied from the viewpoint that the need for land
was to be established and then acquisition carried out to nect the objectivo.
His general practice was to obtain, through the Park superintendont an expression of
the decirability of these lando as additions to the Park, thus cooporating with the
Park Service in its objectives for land acquisition. Ho also had very definito
plans of his own for the Park and in certain cases bought lands to further a specific
project and then offered them to the Park as a package with his plan for their develop-
ment.
By 1935 Mr. Rockofeller's gifts to the Park totalled something over 2.700 aeros of
land that cost over $250,000. The Park boundaries on Mt. Desert at that time extended
to Frenchments Bay on the north and to the Atlantie on the south, By 1946 the total
given by Mr, Roekefciler had rison to approximately 6,950 acros, and by his death
in 1960 the total given, according to a report from Acadia National Park, October 18,
1968, 9,599.08 acros. In his will Mr. Rockefoller boqueathed an additional 1,701.80
acros to Acadia, making a grand total of 11,300 acros, to which should be added a
dozen small parcels willed to the Park the acreage of which have not been deter-
minods Taken all in all, this represents a gift of some 35% of today's total park,
more than given by any other person or group, and probably more than all others
taken together.
A letter of April 26, 1955 from Thomas C. Vint, Chief Division of Design and Con-
struction, National Park Service, to Moracc Albright gives a very cloar picture
of Mr. Rockefeller's relationship to the Park, from one who know him well,
"April 25, 1955
HER
"Some notes concerning what Mr, Rockefeller had to do about the making of Acadia
National Park:
"He bought and gave to the park more land then any other person or group, It is
2
probably saíc to say more land than all others together--cortainly a greater total
in value.
"He built and maintained a carriage road system (notors prohibited) that give one
who travels over it, or one of the loops that make up the system, a great experience
-- an experience that gives the traveler all that Acadia Park has to offer -- its
woods -- its lakes the grand views, the intinate views, the ocean, the mountains,
etc., etc. Unfortunately, the public has responded to those much as it has the trial
systems in other parks and uses then much less then anticipated. This is a motor ago
which, when it settles down and the autonobilo less of c novelty to the general pop-
ulation, the other moans of travel will como back to a reasonable proportion in the
scheme of things. The carriage roads in Leadia National Park will one day get the
recognition they deserve -- through uso by the public, - if not by carriages, by
saddlo horse, bicycle, or by afoot. They will be much used and not by automobile.
"He had much to do about the Park motor road system, which is separated by overpasses
from the carriage roads and the Town roads. He built part of the Cadillac Mountain
road and parts of the main park loop road. He employed an ongincering firm and
Frederick Law Olnsted for the noted landscape architect to make surveys and plans for
the motor road loop. In short ho planned the road system, started construction and
Inter made an agreement with the Government that he would acquire and donate certain
lands to the park if the Government would complete the road system.
"The above facts are well know in connection with these certain points concerning
Mr. Rockofeller's relationship and are of special interest:
"There is a lot of him olf in what he did for Acadia National Park. It was no
ordinary contribution for the public good.
"He knows intinately the physical geography and the beautics of Mt. Dosert Island,
Its hills
..
its
shoreline
its
streams
its
woods
where
the
fino
views
are
--
where autunn colors are best, etc. etc. Few people know the lay of the land and its
interesting datails as well as he.
He
likes
to build roads, Mo has a finc sense of location, fitting a road into the
landscape. He made use of construction methods that reduced scars, many of which by
example were used in other national parkas
The road construction, which began as mentioned in 1915, was of the greatest interest
to Mr. Rockcfeller, He approached this building as both an art and a science, study-
ing every mile himself to give the Daxinun osthetic experience and the maximum com-
fort. He hincelf fitted the roads into the landscape to cause the least possible
scar to the torrain. Mile surveys were made at his request, he worked cut each unit
on paper hinself and oversaw the actual construction, The grades, the curves, and
the fine views for hin a personal creation.
In 1932, lir. Rockefoller made an agreement with Secretary of the Interior Wilbur to
clarify the conditions of land deeded to the Government:
"For a period of at least twenty five years from the date of gift. the horse roads
in existence or later constructed will be open only for the use of horses, horso-
drawn vehicles and pedestrians and not for notor traffic, except by consent of the
3
grantor at the request of the National Park Service, and except for maintenance,
fire fighting, etc."
Mr. Rockofeller resisted the pressure to open the island roads to notors, and was one
of those who opposed their adnissio to the last. Yet, when cars were admitted, he
did much for the motor road program. In short, he planned the road system, started
its construction, and later made an agreement with the Government that he would ac-
quire and donate certain lands to the Park if the Government would complete the road
system.
More specifically, Mr. Rockefeller built the Jordan Pond - Eagle Lake Road from
which the present road up Cadillac Mountain makes its ascont, the Government paying
for the rost. In 1934, he finished the construction of Occan Drive to Sand Beach.
North of this point, lie worked with the Government and offered certain lands to
make extension possible.
In the area of forestry, Mr. Rockefollor pade an additional important contribution.
Vhile earlier the deep woods had been cafe from lumber companies because transport-
ation costs were too high, the use of the now gasoline cawcill soon made it profit-
ablo to cut any of the island's soft WOOD growths. Mr. Rockefeller rescued large
tracts of land from the cawnill. It was little known except to those innodiately
involved that these acquisitions were made just in time to save the forests from
devastation -- in some cases only a few hours ahoad of the lunbernen and speculators.
Further, Mr. Rockefeller followed a continuous policy of reforestation along his
roads. He cut down dead trees, replaced or added to existing planting, brought in or
transferred top coil where further planting accoud desirable, and soodod bare banks
"in order to more completely restore the natural condition."
The fifty-one niles of carriage roads put in with such care and devotion by Mr.
Rockefoller - now all on Park land - proved invaluable during the tragic Mt. Desert
Fire in 1947. Not only did the open spaces provided help check the advance of the
fire itself, but the horse roads made it possible for the fire fighters to move
through the mountains quickly. Without then, the non and equipment could not have
reached Seal Harbor and Northcast Earbor, and they would have burned just as did so
much of Bar Marbor.
Of the total Park area at that time, some 30,000 acres, at loast one-third was
burned over. Consulting with forestry tochnicians, Mr. Rockefoller drow up a plan
for cleanup work, and John II. Eisinger was hired to do the job under a contract with
the National Park Service. All responsibility for the work was undertaken by Mr.
Rockefoller since there were no Park funds at the time to meet the energency. Fire
damage crews worked the year round, and by 1952 expenditures were close to $500,000.
Until his death in 1960, Mr. Rockefeller continued to contribute to further cleanup,
and his widow, Martha Baird Rockefoller, made additional gifts for this work through
1963.
In addition to the fifty-one niles of carriage roads now within the Park, to which
Mr. Rock:efellor gave so much tinc and onthusiasm, there are another sixtoon niles
of such roads on the 2,000 aeros still owned by the Rockefollor family on Mt. Dosert.
These interconnect with the Park roads, and are all open to the public, making a
unique system of sconic drives SOLIC sixty-seven niles in all.
4
There was, in fact, almost no area in connection with Acadia National Park that
Mr. Rockefeller did not touch. He was much interested in Park architecture, and in
1929 sponsored and financed a survey by the Now York architect, Grosvenor Atterbury,
of landscape and architectural problems for the Park Service. He wished to develop
a type of architecture appropriate for Acadia. "I feel, he wrote, "that neither
brick nor stucco would be appropriate. It seens, therefore, as though nativo stone
and wood were the only other materials available. There are many ways in which these
caterials can be used."
In 1931, Mr. Rockefeller had the Brown Mountain and Jordan Pond Gate Houses built for
a cost of about $80,000 -- stone and wood structures reflecting Hornan architecture.
The Brown Mountain House was given to the Park in 1932, the Jordan house in 1940.
Also, in 1923, Mr. Rockefollor purchased the Jordan Pond Tea House for $40,000. He
leased it back to the owners who operated it until 1945. In 1940, Mr. Rocktofeller
gave both the house and the surrounding land to the Park.
Last of all, foreseeing the future, in 1034 Mr. Rockefeller becano a stockholder, and
subsequently a Director of the Acadia Corporation, organized to take concessions
from the Government for business opportunities in Acadia, and to operate then. His
main interest in those concessions was their architectural detail, their suitability
of location, and attractivonoss of structure. Ho kept in constant touch with the
Corporation architecto, and submitted plans, revisions and suggestions for several
of the concession buildings.
Taken all in all, the contributions of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. to Acadia
National Park, spread over half a century, were an extraordinary expression of his
devotion to preserving the great natural beauties still to be seen today in Mount
Decert Island.
5
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 1 of 7
Linda Fint HaClelland.
Presenting Nature:
The Historic Landscape Design of the National Park Service,
1916-1942
N.P.S., 2016.
Kee 100000
VI. A DECADE OF EXPANSION, 1933 TO 1942
(continued)
PUBLIC WORKS ADMINISTRATION PROJECTS
The Public Works Administration (PWA) was created by Executive Order 6174 on June
Presenting Nature
16, 1933, under the authority of Title II of the National Industrial Recovery Act (48 Stat.
200). The order called for a comprehensive program of public works "to increase the
consumption of industrial and agricultural products by increasing purchasing power, to
MENU
reduce and relieve unemployment. to improve standards of labor and otherwise to
rehabilitate industry, and to conserve natural resources." President Roosevelt appointed
Cover
Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes administrator of the new agency. [1]
Contents
The PWA administered the program of federal and nonfederal works through allotments.
Federal projects received funding based on their value to national planning and their role
Foreword
in fulfilling comprehensive plans prepared in advance. As a result, the National Park
Service received funding for greatly needed capital improvements in all the parks and
Acknowledgements
monuments. Projects ranged from the development and improvement of trails, roads, and
water systems to the construction of a wide range of park buildings and structures, the
Overview
most common of which were comfort stations. ranger stations. patrol cabins, fire
lookouts. garages. residences, and maintenance shops. Some parks received funds for
administration buildings and museums. Others received funds for campground
Stewardship
development. Existing buildings in many parks were added to, improved, and adapted for
new uses using PWA funds. Restoration projects were undertaken in national
Design Ethic Origins
monuments, such as Casa Grande.
(1916-1927)
Design Policy &
In the West, the influx of funds enabled the park service to build long-needed facilities
Process
and add to the administrative infrastructure required to meet the demands of increasing
(1916-1927)
visitation. The development of facilities in the national monuments, such as Casa Grande,
Petrified Forest. and Tumacori Mission. received for the first time a regular source of
Western Field Office
funding. In the East. PWA funds made possible the development of facilities in the
(1927-1932)
numerous memorials. battlefields. and reservations that had come into the system in
1933. PWA funds also made possible the acquisition of important land areas for the Blue
Park Planning
Ridge Parkway and the construction of the Department of the Interior Headquarters in
Washington. District of Columbia.
Decade of
Expansion
During the first year of the PWA. the National Park Service received approval for roads
(1933-1942)
and trail work valued at $17.059.450 and other physical improvements valued at
$2,145,000. The master plans prepared by Vint's office during the preceding two years
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htmg
1/7/2003
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 2 of 7
State rains
(1933-1942)
provided a ready-made outline of work projects that could be put into action immediately
to provide relief to the unemployed. Work was done under contract with skilled labor
Appendix A
subject to specifications drawn up by the landscape and engineering divisions. Resident
landscape architects reviewed the progress of each project and approved the completed
work. [2]
Appendix B
a
Bibliography
Although the public works programs emphasized construction. this work had a strong
relationship to the landscape design of the parks. First, all projects were based on master
plans and as such shared the larger concern for site development and conformed to the
principles for landscape protection and harmonization that underlined all park
development. In addition, projects such as the stockade around the service area at Mount
Rainier's Yakima Park and the fence and entry gate at Tumacori Mission, although
structural in nature, were important landscape features.
In 1933, the Landscape Division, renamed the Branch of Plans and Designs, was given
full responsibility for producing building plans, specifications. and estimates. As the
demand for working drawings and updated master plans increased dramatically in
summer of 1933, the design process and training program that Vint had instituted in the
late 1920s changed. In July 1933. when the first public works allotments became
available, Vint (who was now called chief architect) had a staff of fifteen, which included
a structural engineer. as well as many landscape architects with varying degrees of
experience. Most of these were resident landscape architects assigned to one or more
parks in the West and were directing the landscape work of the CCC. Both the men
assigned to the parks and those who worked in the office created plans, drawings, and
specifications under the process Vint had set up in 1928
Within two months. however.Vint's office had expanded dramatically. New members
included architects and engineers as well as landscape architects with the skills to carry
out the drafting and engineering required by the accelerated construction program. By
November 1934, twenty-four additional designers had joined Vint's staff in San
Francisco. While this corps enabled Vint to meet the immediate demand for designs for
public works projects in the parks. this new generation of designers lacked firsthand
familiarity with the parks and direct contact with park superintendents. All design of
working drawings for the western parks was now done by staff assigned to the San
Francisco office. The resident landscape architects continued. however, to revise the
master plans and review all drawings for their parks. These changes resulted in a loss of
the informality and free exchange of ideas that had marked the late 1920s There
emerged
the need for a well-defined approval process involving the park superintendents, the
resident landscape architects and engineers. the chief architect, the chief engineer, the
chief forester, the sanitary engineer. and the director of the park service.
Vint's own status changed as well. In late 1934, he moved to the park service
headquarters in Washington. D.C.. to head the Branch of Plans and Designs. William G.
Carnes was placed in charge of the Western Division, and Charles Peterson remained in
charge of the Yorktown office. which became the Eastern Division.At this time, the
Western Division was divided into geographical districts headed by Ernest Davidson,
Merel Sager. Harry Langley. John Wosky. Howard Baker, Herbert Kreinkamp, and
Kenneth McCarter. [3]
All designers in the service were consolidated into the western and eastern offices, where
the architect. structural engineer. mechanical engineer, specifications writer, and
estimator could work together and efficiently complete the massive volume of public
works projects. This arrangement was successful. building on Vint's idea for a
professional design office. Recounting the achievement of the Western Division from
1933 to 1937. architect E. A. Nickel wrote. "It was due to this complete organization that
the entire Public Works Building Program was brought up to a satisfactory conclusion,
despite many unknown factors at the time. and the continuous change in building
conditions and prices of labor and materials in the National Park and Monument
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htm
1/7/2003
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 3 of 7
areas." 141>
The national parks used PWA funds to build a wide variety of structures, from
administrative and utilitarian projects such as patrol cabins, fire lookouts, and blacksmith
shops, to landscape structures such as gates and steps, to utility systems and facilities for
visitor use. The Western Division received a total of 185 PWA allotments from 1933 to
1937. These allotments covered projects as diverse as steps to the cliff at Montezuma
Castle National Monument, the naturalist's residence at Lassen Volcanic National Park,
the superintendent's residence at General Grant, barns at Sequoia's Redwood and Ash
Mountain headquarters. innumerable snowshoe cabins at Mount McKinley (later Denali),
picnic ground improvements at Muir Woods, an administration building at Crater Lake,
a
pump house and water system at Canyon de Chelly National Monument, and repairs to
the lighthouse at Cabrillo National Monument. [5]
At Mount Rainier, public works projects included the construction of a stockaded fence at
Yakima Park to screen the maintenance sheds, garages, and equipment from public view,
thus enclosing the work yard of the park village. Screens of vegetation were impractical
in this subalpine terrain, where wind, temperature, and soil conditions hindered tree
growth. The design of the stockaded fence was in keeping with the pioneer theme
introduced by the blockhouse-style administration building. Public works funds were also
used for the construction of log-and-stone comfort stations at the camping and picnic
grounds at Yakima Park and a log ranger station and frame warehouse at the White River
Entrance. Constructed elsewhere in the park were four fire lookouts, several fire patrol
cabins. a number of fire guard cabins and caches, and even an icehouse. PWA funds were
also used to develop campgrounds.
At Yosemite, housing demanded much of the designers' attention, and a number of
residences were built. in the form of individual homes, apartment houses, and duplexes.
There the funds also went toward developing a campground at Tuolumne Meadows,
building cabins for the Indian Village. and constructing the Hennis Ridge Fire Lookout.
In Yellowstone. at the Mammoth Hot Springs headquarters. a large apartment house was
built for rangers. and utility buildings were constructed. At Grand Canyon, a community
building was built. in addition to many maintenance shops and residences. At new parks,
such as Grand Teton. an administration building. entrance stations, and
a
superintendent's residence were constructed. At Glacier, sorely needed backcountry patrol
cabins and fire caches were built. as well as many snowshoe cabins and several boat
houses.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htm
1/7/2003
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 4 of 7
During the 1930s, funding from the Public Works Administration made possible the
construction of much-needed housing for park employees in Yosemite National Park.
single-family residences took the form of Craftsman-style bungalows and had redwood
siding, wooden shingles, stone foundations, an entrance porch with peeled log railings, and
a stone chimney. Each house had a living room, dining room, kitchen, 3 bedrooms, and 2
baths. The CCC removed dangerous limbs from the surrounding oaks and planted ferns,
azaleas, and other native plants as part of a program to beautify and naturalize Yosemite
Village. (Report on the Building Program from Allotments of the Public Works
Administration, 1933-1937)
In all of these projects. emphasis was placed on principles of landscape protection and
harmonious design. In the 1930s. the Branch of Plans and Designs relied heavily on the
standards and specifications developed in the late 1920s and benefited greatly from the
experience of Punchard, Hull, Vint, and the service's first resident landscape architects,
including Ernest Davidson, John Wosky, Merel Sager, Kenneth McCarter, and Charles
Peterson. Practices well established by the 1930s were readily incorporated into the public
works building program. Designers endeavored to harmonize structures with the natural
surroundings by using native materials. Road building adhered to the specifications
drawn up by Vint's office and maintained the characteristics that were recognized as
hallmarks of national park roads. The landscape designs for bridges. which routinely
included elevations and details for arch rings, were increasingly prepared by engineers in
the Western and Eastern design offices. The standards for trail construction that had been
developed for western parks by Chief Engineer Frank Kittredge in the late 1920s were
published as a circular for the parks in 1934. and, through the substantial PWA funds
available for trail building. were applied to parks nationwide, including the Great Smoky
Mountains and Shenandoah national parks in the East. The concern for naturalism and
harmonization that determined the construction of surface trails was also applied to
underground trail construction and improvements in parks such as Carlsbad Cavern. As
the National Park Service inherited the parkways in the East, including the Mount
Vernon Parkway near the nation's capital. and as the Eastern Division gained experience
in building lincar park roads and parkways, such as Skyline Drive in Shenandoah and
the
Colonial and the Blue Ridge parkways, major advances were made in the aesthetics,
kinetics. and engineering of park roads.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htm
1/7/2003
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 5 of 7
The entrance to King's Palace in Carlsbad Cavern in 1934 illustrates the lighting
and trail improvements made possible by Public Works Administration funds.
The trail formed a loop that followed an undulating line among the cave's
principal features. A smooth trail surface was made from earth and stone that had
been removed from the cave floor during cleanup. Larger rocks formed a coping
along the paths as well as the dry-laid walls that supported the trail. (National
Park service Historic Photography collection)
While the principles and practices for park development were standardized, their
applications were highly individual based on the unique character of each park and the
site and setting selected for construction. The western parks. for example, covered many
types of areas. such as forested and wilderness areas. deserts. barren mountainous areas,
rocky and treeless areas, areas of heavy rain and snow, and areas of no rain. The Western
Division adopted a specific type of building for each location, such as flat-roofed adobe or
pueblo structures in the Southwest and log or heavy timber constructions in heavily
forested areas. As they adopted these forms. designers acknowledged the cultural
influence of Spanish and Indian traditions in the Southwest and the pioneer traditions of
covered-wagon days in other parts of the West.
The designs were simple and functional but remained consistent with the architectural
themes that had been developed for each park or, in new parks. took on appropriate
characteristics drawn from pioneer, indigenous. or other local forms. Designers of
utilitarian buildings endeavored to find obscure locations out of the sight of park visitors
and simple functional and economical designs that harmonized with the natural setting.
Due to the rapid production of drawings and the cost limitations placed on construction,
new designs frequently lacked the careful attention to detail that marked the late 1920s
and early 1930s.
Specific objectives guided the work of the Branch of Plans and Designs during the 1930s.
In a 1937 report on the achievements of the Western Division, E. A. Nickel summarized
six basic principles. First, buildings should be in harmony with the natural surroundings
and should be secondary to the landscape. unlike the buildings in a city or town. Second,
all buildings in any one area should be in harmony with each other. having similar
materials and elements of design-for example. roofs of the same type built of the same
material and having the same slope. Third. horizontal lines should predominate. Fourth,
stones and logs used in construction should be in scale with each other and their
surrounding natural counterparts. providing a well-balanced and unified design. Fifth,
where large trees and rock outcroppings were likely to dwarf buildings, giving them the
appearance of being under scale. stones and logs used in construction were to be slightly
oversized. Finally, rigid. straight lines were to be avoided wherever possible. "creating the
feeling that the work was executed by pioneer craftsmen." This last principle applied to
the ends of logs. stonemasonry. ironwork and hardware. and the numerous architectural
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htm
1/7/2003
National Park Service: Presenting Nature (Chapter 6)
Page 6 of 7
details that made up a park building. [6]
Before starting a building project. designers carefully studied the field conditions of each
site, based on information generally provided by the park superintendent or the resident
landscape architect. Designers considered the available natural materials and
transportation, the proximity of the site to park headquarters. and any unusual factors that
might affect the cost and design of the structure. Certain types of structures were more
problematic and costlier than others. Fire lookouts, snowshoe cabins, and outlying ranger
stations required that materials be transported to remote locations, often on mountaintops.
Hauling in supplies for the work crew and construction materials such as cement, lumber,
glass, hardware, and water added substantially to the cost of backcountry construction.
Materials were often carried on muleback, making it impossible to transport materials
larger than eight feet long. The cost of construction in a large park like Grand Canyon
varied from location to location. Costs on the South Rim were lowest because of
proximity to the railroad and park headquarters. On the North Rim, materials had to be
transported 200 miles from the railroad terminal, and at Phantom Ranch on the floor of
the canyon, materials were transported by mule requiring a one-day trip. At Yosemite,
construction occurred in three principal sites of varying distances from the railroad: the
park headquarters areas in Yosemite Valley, 14 miles from the railroad; Glacier Point
and Wawona. one-half day's trucking time from headquarters: and Tuolumne Meadows,
approximately one day's trucking time from headquarters. At Yellowstone, the distance
between park headquarters and building sites varied from 5 miles to a full day's trucking
time. and some sites were accessible only by mule. [7]
Because of their functions and the need for sturdy construction, many of the structures
built with public works allotments entailed a substantial amount of concrete work. This
work. whether in the form of concrete footings or walls. was carried out in a very
different manner from that in cities or towns, where sacks of cement and aggregate stone
were delivered by truck to a site and water was piped in by public utility. In national
parks. concrete materials were gathered from nearby gravel and sand beds, and water was
collected from nearby streams and springs and sometimes brought to the site by mule. Not
surprisingly. at Mount McKinley National Park, where cement cost $4.00 per sack
compared with 75c to $1.00 in most other parks. construction costs were the highest of
any park. [8]
PWA projects fostered an increasing reliance on modern materials that were long-lasting
and durable. and development of simple and functional designs adapted to the topography
and character of their setting. In locations where rustic log-and-stone construction was
out of place. where there was little supply of native building materials, or where the scale
or utilitarian purpose of a structure made construction with native wood and stone
impractical. designers experimented with substitute materials. Concrete was the most
common choice. and efforts were made to stain concrete walls a natural color or give
them a texture. often by imprinting the natural grain of carefully selected form boards.
Climate and the character of nearby vegetation were important factors in the selection of
materials. and culturally inspired designs were used whenever possible. Volcanic rocks,
for example, formed the walls of overlooks at Hawaii. while corrugated iron provided a
practical material for roofing.
Continued >>>
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/mcclelland/mcclelland6a.htm
1/7/2003
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
Vint, Thomas C-1894-1967
Details
Series 2