World's Fair court of honor and grand basin in Jackson Park After the state legislature created the South Park Commission in 1869, the designers of New York's
Central Park,
Frederick Law Olmsted and
Calvert Vaux, were hired to lay out the park, which included the
Midway Plaisance and
Washington Park. Lois Willie explained in her book
Forever Open, Clear, and Free, "Olmstead said Jackson Park should be water oriented, with a yacht harbor, winding walkways around the lagoons, small bridges, bathing pavilions, and plenty of space for boating." However, their designs were not put into place at that time, and Jackson Park remained untouched until Chicago was chosen to host the World's Fair several years later. One of the landmarks that recalls the 1893 Columbian Exposition is the
Statue of The Republic, only it is now a replica one-third the size of the original
The Republic statue. The designers used the
Statue of Liberty as inspiration when they were creating the original. Today the 1/3 size statue of
The Republic stands at the site of the 1893 Expositions Administration Building. Known originally as "South Park", the landscape had eastern and western divisions connected by a grand boulevard named the Midway Plaisance. The eastern division became known as "Lake Park"; however, in 1880 the commission asked the public to suggest official names for both the eastern and western divisions. The names "Jackson" and "Washington" were proposed. In the following year, Lake Park was renamed "Jackson Park" to honor
Andrew Jackson (1767–1845), the seventh president of the United States. In 1890, Chicago won the honor of hosting the
World's Columbian Exposition. In 1891, Jackson Park was selected as its site. Jackson Park featured the first public
golf course west of the
Alleghenies, which opened in 1899.
Colonel B. J. D. Irwin, a retired military surgeon and local golfer, sought democratization of recreation in Chicago, and ensured that Jackson Park Golf Course be made open to the public for free, such that "golfers of limited means... can play at almost nominal cost, and cheaper facilities in Chicago would permit of a number enjoying the game who at present are debarred by the dues demanded by the local clubs".
Intervening years in Jackson Park, a one-third sized replica of
Daniel Chester French's
The Republic Most of the park burned to the ground after the fair closed. A headline from January 9. 1894 read, "THE WHITE CITY IN FLAMES; FIRE DESTROYS THE FAIREST OF THE BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS". On May 16, 1896, the Jackson Park Yacht Club (JPYC) was organized with incorporation on June 3 but the original organization failed. Rights to the club were purchased and a new JPYC was formed with thirty-eight members with about twenty boats. The Park Commission's aid was sought to dredge and clear a channel through the wreckage of the exposition. By 1901 membership had expanded to 149 with 105 boats. By 1902, with the club house built of scrap lumber on a purchased scow, the club joined the Lake Michigan Yachting Association. Over the next years, the club grew in membership and in competitive yachts. By 1915, plans were underway for a new club house with sixteen life memberships the core of the funding for the new structure which was dedicated on Memorial Day 1916 by Governor
Edward F. Dunne, who arrived on
William A. Lydon's 181-foot steam yacht . On July 17, 1916, zoologist and philosopher
J. Howard Moore killed himself on Jackson Park's Wooded Island. He regularly visited there to study birds. The Palace of Fine Arts decayed after the fair until it was reopened as the Museum of Science and Industry in 1933.
Sears, Roebuck & Company president
Julius Rosenwald donated the initial investment. During World War II, vandals severely damaged the Japanese Garden. The Chicago Park District waited for decades before considering repairing it. Eventually, the city of
Osaka donated money for the refurbishment. During the
Cold War, part of Jackson Park contained a
Nike Surface-to-Air Missile site and the nearby point was used as its radar station. In the 1950s, the Wooded Island was almost leased to the Army to become the location of an anti-aircraft installation, but was strongly protested against, as the Park District had given the Army other location options and the Wooded Island was spared. In 1965, the people of South Chicago were growing tired of the traffic jams on Lake Shore Drive, so the city made plans to widen the road, straighten its curves and run it straight through Jackson Park. Women and children then conducted protests and rallies around tree stumps. The efforts eventually brought results and the city halted roadwork after it had already gone halfway through the park. The park's East Lagoon, or Music Court Bridge was featured in the 1980 film
The Blues Brothers. In the film the titular characters encounter a
White Supremacist Nazi demonstration on the bridge and drive their car over the bridge regardless, forcing the Nazis to jump into the water.
Rehabilitation A
nonprofit organization called Project 120 began collaborating with the
Chicago Park District in 2012 to restore Jackson Park to designer
Frederick Law Olmsted's vision. The group's plans include improving the park's green space, creating a music pavilion, and creating a great lawn for park-goers to use for leisure activities. In October 2016
Yoko Ono unveiled a permanent artwork called
Skylanding on the Wooded Island; it is Ono's first permanent art installation in the United States. Ono said she was inspired during a visit to the Garden of the Phoenix in 2013 and that she feels a connection to the city of
Chicago. Jackson Park has a number of volunteers who help maintain the park, but Project 120 aims to go beyond cleanup and plant maintenance. At a cost of about $8.1 million, habitat restoration on Jackson Park's Wooded Island began in 2015 and will continue until 2019. Restoration will take five years to complete and another 25 years reach ecological maturity. The restoration is being done as part of the Army Corps of Engineers Great Lakes Fishery & Ecosystem Restoration (GLFER) program. Improving the park's green space and enhancing its wildlife are meant to improve the appearance and popularity of a park that has been in decline. Some aspects of the restoration, especially plans for a music pavilion, have generated controversy. == Remaining World's Columbian Exposition structures ==