Eagle Point Park Nomination to the National Register of Historic Places Copyrighted
May 1, 2017
City of Dubuque Consent Items # 8.
ITEM TITLE: Eagle Point Park Nomination to the National Register of
Historic Places
SUMMARY: Historic Preservation Commission recommending approval
of the Eagle Point Park Nomination to the National Register
of Historic Places and authorize the Mayor to sign the
Certified Local Government Evaluation form.
SUGGESTED DISPOSITION: Suggested Disposition: Receive and File; Approve
ATTACHMENTS:
Description Type
HPC Letter Staff Memo
Staff NRHP Memo Staff Memo
Eagle Point Park Nomination Supporting Documentation
Planning Services Department Dubuque
City Hall bA" THE CITY OF
50 West 13th Street ��
Dubuque,IA 52001-4864 1 I I I I.
QTE
(563)589-4210 phone
(563)589-4221 fax Masterpiece on the Mississippi
(563)690-6678 TDD
rolanning,§dtyofdubugue.or¢
April 24, 2017
The Honorable Mayor and City Council Members
City of Dubuque
City Hall — 50 W. 13th Street
DubuquelA 52001
Applicant: City of Dubuque
Location: Eagle Point Park
Description: To nominate Eagle Point Park Historic District to the National Register of
Historic Places
Dear Mayor and City Council Members:
The City of Dubuque Historic Preservation Commission has reviewed the above-cited
request. The nomination, photographs, and evaluation form for this nomination are
attached for your review.
Discussion
Planning Services Manager Laura Carstens, representing the applicant, spoke in favor
of the request. She explained the State Nominations Review Committee plans to
consider Eagle Point Park, 2601 Shiras Avenue, for nomination to the National Register
of Historic Places (NRNP) at their June 9, 2017 meeting. As a participant of the Certified
Local Government Program, she said the City of Dubuque is required to review and
comment on the proposed National Register nominations of properties within its
jurisdiction. She noted in this case, the City is the property owner and the applicant.
Staff Member Carstens explained the difference between City and National Districts:
• In a "City Designated" Historic District, the Historic Preservation Commission
conducts design reviews of proposed exterior changes to a building, sign or other
structure that could impact its historic or architectural significance and that
cannot be approved by Planning Services as consistent with the City's
Architectural Guidelines.
• In a "National Register Historic District", property owners can continue to make
interior and exterior improvements to their buildings as well as expand their
operations and their facilities. No City reviews are required beyond what is
presently needed for a building permit or site plan approval. The Commission
and staff do not conduct design reviews.
Staff Member Carstens reviewed that the State Historic Preservation Office is
requesting the Commission comment on whether Eagle Point Park meets significance
Service People Integrity Responsibility Innovation Teamwork
The Honorable Mayor and City Council Members
Page 2
criteria (A, B, C or D) for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. She said the
nomination indicates that the Eagle Point Park Historic District is locally significant
under Criterion A and Criterion C, which are described as follows:
• Criterion A is a property that is associated with events that have made a
significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history.
• Criterion C is a property that embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type,
period, or method of construction of represents the work of a master, or
possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable
entity whose components lack individual distinction.
Staff Member Carstens reviewed that once the State Nominations Review Committee
has concluded their review, and any final revisions have been made, the State Historic
Preservation Office will forward the nomination to the National Park Service for final
consideration and ultimately listing in the National Register of Historic Places. She
noted that Planning Services staff anticipates the National Park Service will grant
approval sometime in late September or early October of 2017.
Staff Member Carstens noted that Planning Services staff recommends support for the
nomination that the Eagle Point Park Historic District is eligible for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places with local significance under Criterion A and Criterion C.
There were no public comments.
The Historic Preservation Commission discussed the request, concurred with the
nomination, and recommended approval to list Eagle Point Park Historic District on the
NRHP because the park is locally significant under Criterion A and Criterion C.
Recommendation
By a vote of 8 to 0, the Historic Preservation Commission recommends that the City
Council approve the nomination, and authorize the Mayor to sign the Certified Local
Government Evaluation Form.
A simple majority vote is needed for the City Council to approve the request.
Respectfully submitted,
yiw—
Christina Monk, Chairperson
Historic Preservation Commission
Attachments
cc: Marie Ware, Leisure Services Manager
Service People Integrity Responsibility Innovation Teamwork
THE CM OF Dubuque
DVB E Afl-be�ricaM
Masterpiece on the Mississippi I () I
2007•2012•2013
MEMORANDUM
TO: Historic Preservation Commission
FROM: Laura Carstens, Planning Services Manager1-6�-
SUBJECT: NRHP Nomination of the Eagle Point Park Historic District
DATE: April 13, 2017
INTRODUCTION
The State Nominations Review Committee plans to consider Eagle Point Park, 2601
Shiras Avenue, for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) during
their June 9, 2017 meeting. The State Historic Preservation Office (has provided the
enclosed copy of the nomination, photographs, and review form for this nomination.
BACKGROUND
As a participant of the Certified Local Government Program, the City of Dubuque is
required to review and comment on the proposed National Register nominations of
properties within its jurisdiction. In this case, the City is the property owner as well as
the applicant to nominate Eagle Point Park as a National Register Historic District.
What is the difference between a City Historic District and a National Register District?
In a "City Designated" Historic District, the Historic Preservation Commission conducts
design reviews of proposed exterior changes to a building, sign or other structure that
could impact its historic or architectural significance and that cannot be approved by
Planning Services as consistent with the City's Architectural Guidelines.
In a "National Register Historic District", property owners can continue to make interior
and exterior improvements to their buildings as well as expand their operations and their
facilities. No City reviews are required beyond what is presently needed for a building
permit or site plan approval. The Commission and staff do not conduct design reviews.
DISCUSSION
The State Historic Preservation Office is requesting the Commission comment on
whether Eagle Point Park meets significance criteria (A, B, C or D) for listing in the
National Register of Historic Places.
The nomination indicates that the Eagle Point Park Historic District is locally significant
under criteria A and C. Criterion A is a property that is associated with events that have
made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. Criterion C is a
property that embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of
construction of represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or
represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack individual
distinction.
Once the State Nominations Review Committee has concluded their review, and any
final revisions have been made, the State Historic Preservation Office will forward the
nomination to the National Park Service for final consideration and ultimately listing in
the National Register of Historic Places. It takes at least two months from the date the
National Park Service receives the nomination until the State Historic Preservation
Office receives notice of listing. Planning Services staff anticipates the National Park
Service will grant approval sometime in late September or early October of 2017.
RECOMMENDATION
Planning Services staff recommends support for the nomination that the Eagle Point
Park Historic District is eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places with
local significance under criteria A and C.
REQUESTED ACTION
Please review the attached documents and be prepared to recommend to the State
Nominations Review Committee whether the Eagle Point Park Historic District is eligible
for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
Enclosure
cc Marie Ware, Leisure Services Manager
FAUsers\Djohnson\HPC\Eagle Point Park\NRNP Nomination\Memo HPC NRHP Nomination Review.doc
2
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF TERRY E.aRANSTAD,GOVERNOR
CULTURAL AFFAIRS KIM REYNOLDS, LT GOVERNOR
MARY COWNIE, DIRECTOR
CHRIS KRAMER. DEPUTY DIRECTOR
April 13, 2017
Dubuque HP
Christina Monk
951 Main Street
Dubuque, IA 52001
RE: Eagle Point Park Historic District,Dubuque
Dear Ms. Monk:
The State Nominations Review Committee (SNRC)plans to consider the property referenced above for
nomination to the National Register of Historic Places during their June 9, 2017 meeting. As a participant in
the Certified Local Government Program, the Historic Preservation Commission is required to review and
comment on proposed National Register nominations of properties within its jurisdiction. The State is required
to provide you with a 60-day period for the review,unless we mutually agree to expedite the process. I am
contacting you to ask that you initiate the review process for the Historic Preservation Commission. As an
attachment to the notification email is a copy of the nomination,photographs, and the review form. The review
process will require the following:
♦ The Historic Preservation Commission should review the nomination during one of their meetings. In
advance of the meeting,please send a formal invitation to your chief local elected official (the mayor or
chair of the Board of Supervisors) with a copy of the nomination. You also need to send a formal invitation
to the property owner/owners. If they are not familiar with the National Register of Historic Places,
information about listing and the benefits of nomination is available at http://www.nps.gov/nr/(see
especially the Frequently Asked Questions and Owners sections): You also need to make available copies
of the nomination for public review before the meeting. For example, leave a review copy at the courthouse
and public library. Please indicate in your public meeting announcement that a review copy of the
nomination is available and where the review copies can be found.
♦ The question for the Historic Preservation Commission to answer when reviewing the nomination is
whether the nominated property meets the National Register of Historic Places criteria for significance and
integrity(see Bulletin 15, How to Apply the National Register Criteria for Evaluation). If the Commission
feels that the property and the nomination meets the criteria,the Commission should check the box
recommending that the property be listed. If the Commission feels that the property does not meet the
criteria, then check the box recommending that the property not be listed. Your chief local elected official
should use the same approach when reviewing the nomination.
♦ You might want to invite the individual who prepared the nomination to attend the public meeting and
present the nomination. Please keep a record of the meeting (copy of the public notice, agenda,minutes,list
of attendees). At the conclusion of the meeting,the Commission should make a motion regarding their
recommendation. The Chairman of the Commission will complete Item#1, the Commission's portion of
ther TvAieE 4' �A���I e o fi�l�ar t oeca es�f t1TceE l3� eta , sigltl'F., 'ig f tine t�,�A�' 0FA� °d1kany
comments made by commission members during the meeting. If your chief local elected official attended
the public meeting, inquire if he/she is prepared to sign the review form.
♦ In the event that your chief local elected official was unable to attend the meeting, the Commission
Chairman should forward the review form to him/her for review and comment. Have your chief local
elected official sign the form and return it to the Historic Preservation Commission.
♦ Item#3 on the Review form asks for the review and signature of a preservation professional. If your
commission does not have a professionally qualified historian or architectural historian who can complete
this part of the form, you may leave Item#3 blank and I will arrange to have a SHPO staff member
complete that part of the form.
♦ After you have completed Items#1 through#2 (through#3 if a preservation professional is available),
please make a copy of the completed review forms for your file and send the original copies of the
completed forms to me.
♦ The Commission should keep the nomination and photographs. File them in your inventory, as you will
need the information for future reference.
If the Historic Preservation Commission and your chief local elected official disagree with one another on the
property's National Register eligibility,both views will be presented to the SNRC for their consideration during
review of the nomination. If both the Historic Preservation Commission(by Commission majority) and the
Mayor do not consider the property eligible for National Register listing, we must halt the nomination. Be
advised that when a nomination is halted, the property owner, the person who prepared the nomination or any
interested party may appeal the decision. In addition, the nomination will still go forward to the National Park
Service for an official "Determination of Eligibility."
Please contact Paula Mohr at 515/281-6826 or paula.mohrgiowa.gov with any questions or concerns regarding
the CLG program or the process for this review. You can find the answers to frequently asked questions on our
website, such as the meaning of being listed on the National Register of Historic Places or the National Register
process http://www.iowahistory.or istoric-preservation/national-register-of-historic-places/index.httnl.
Sincerely,
J
Elizabeth Foster
National Register Coordinator
State Historical Society of Iowa
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS
STATE HISTORICAL BUILDING • 600 E. LOCUST ST. • DES MOINES, IA 50319 • P; 515.291.5111 • CULTURALAPFAIRS,ORG
2
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF TERRY E. BRANSTAD,GOVERNOR
CULTURAL AFFAIRS KIM REYNOLDS, LT.GOVERNOR
MARY COWNIE, DIRECTOR
CHRIS KRAMER, DEPUTY DIRECTOR
April 13, 2017
Dubuque HP
David A JoEER
Planning Services Depattruent,City H 1
50 W 13th St
Dubuque,IA 52001
RE: Eagle Point Park Historic District,Dubuque
Dear Mr. Johnson:
The State Nominations Review Committee (SNRC)plans to consider the property referenced above for
nomination to the National Register of Historic Places during their June 9, 2017 meeting. As a participant in
the Certified Local Government Program, the Historic Preservation Commission is required to review and
comment on proposed National Register nominations of properties within its jurisdiction. The State is required
to provide you with a 60-day period for the review,unless we mutually agree to expedite the process. I am
contacting you to ask that you initiate the review process for the Historic Preservation Commission. As an
attachment to the notification email is a copy of the nomination,photographs, and the review form. The review
process will require the following:
♦ The Historic Preservation Commission should review the nomination during one of their meetings. In
advance of the meeting, please send a formal invitation to your chief local elected official (the mayor or
chair of the Board of Supervisors)with a copy of the nomination. You also need to send a formal invitation
to the property owner/owners. If they are not familiar with the National Register of Historic Places,
information about listing and the benefits of nomination is available at http://www.nps.gov/nr/ (see
especially the Frequently Asked Questions and Owners sections): You also need to make available copies
of the nomination for public review before the meeting. For example, leave a review copy at the courthouse
and public library. Please indicate in your public meeting announcement that a review copy of the
nomination is available and where the review copies can be found.
♦ The question for the Historic Preservation Commission to answer when reviewing the nomination is
whether the nominated property meets the National Register of Historic Places criteria for significance and
integrity(see Bulletin 15, How to Apply the National Register Criteria for Evaluation). If the Commission
feels that the property and the nomination meets the criteria,the Commission should check the box
recommending that the property be listed. If the Commission feels that the property does not meet the
criteria, then check the box recommending that the property not be listed. Your chief local elected official
should use the same approach when reviewing the nomination.
♦ You might want to invite the individual who prepared the nomination to attend the public meeting and
present the nomination. Please keep a record of the meeting(copy of the public notice, agenda,minutes, list
of attendees). At the conclusion of the meeting, the Commission should make a motion regarding their
recommendation. The Chairman of the Commission will complete Item#1, the Commission's portion of
STATE HISTORICAL.BUILDING • 600 E. LOCUST ST. • DES MOINES, IA 50319 • P: 515.281.5111 • CULTURALAFFAIRS.ORG
the review form. Be sure to fill in the date of the public meeting, sign the signature line and record any
comments made by commission members during the meeting. If your chief local elected official attended
the public meeting, inquire if he/she is prepared to sign the review form.
♦ In the event that your chief local elected official was unable to attend the meeting, the Commission
Chairman should forward the review form to him/her for review and comment. Have your chief local
elected official sign the form and return it to the Historic Preservation Commission.
♦ Item#3 on the Review form asks for the review and signature of a preservation professional. If your
commission does not have a professionally qualified historian or architectural historian who can complete
this part of the form, you may leave Item#3 blank and I will arrange to have a SHPO staff member
complete that part of the form.
♦ After you have completed Items#1 through#2 (through#3 if a preservation professional is available),
please make a copy of the completed review forms for your file and send the original copies of the
completed forms to me.
♦ The Commission should keep the nomination and photographs. File them in your inventory, as you will
need the information for future reference.
If the Historic Preservation Commission and your chief local elected official disagree with one another on the
property's National Register eligibility,both views will be presented to the SNRC for their consideration during
review of the nomination. If both the Historic Preservation Commission(by Commission majority) and the
Mayor do not consider the property eligible for National Register listing,we must halt the nomination. Be
advised that when a nomination is halted, the property owner, the person who prepared the nomination or any
interested party may appeal the decision. In addition, the nomination will still go forward to the National Park
Service for an official "Determination of Eligibility."
Please contact Paula Mohr at 515/281-6826 or paula.mohrpiowa.gov with any questions or concerns regarding
the CLG program or the process for this review. You can find the answers to frequently asked questions on our
website, such as the meaning of being listed on the National Register of Historic Places or the National Register
process hht ://www.iowahistory.or istoric-preservation/national-register-of-historic-places/index.html.
Sincerely,
1 �_f
Elizabeth Foster
National Register Coordinator
State Historical Society of Iowa
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS
STATE HISTORICAL 6UH DING - 600 E. LOCUST ST. . DES MOINES, IA 50319 • P: 515281.5111 • CULTURALAEFAIRS.ORG 2
CERTIFIED LOCAL GOVERNMENT
NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION
EVALUATION REPORT FORM -
As a participant in the Certified Local Government Program (CLG), the Historic Preservation Commission is required to review and
comment on proposed National Register nominations of properties within its jurisdiction. The State is required to provide the CLG
with a 60 -day period for the review prior to a State Nominations Review Committee (SNRC) meeting. This form must be received by
the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) five days in advance of the State Nomination Review Committee (SNRC) meeting.
(Please print clearly)
Historic Property Name: Eagle Point Park Historic District
Address: 2601 Shiras Avenue.Dubuque Iowa 52001
Certified Local Governmeut Name: City_ of Dubuque
Date of public meeting for nomination 1' eview: Historic Preservation Commission: April 20, 2017: C. Council Mav 1. 2017
Applicable Criteria: (Please Check the Appropriate Box)
Criterion A (Historical Events) X Criterion C (Architecture)
Ej Criterion B (Important Person)
U Criterion D (Archaeological)
Please check the following box that is appropriate to the nomination (Please print clearly).
X
The Con-unission recommends that the property should be listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
LI The Commission recommends that the property should not be listed in the National Register for the following
reasons:
D The Commission chooses not to make a recommendation on this nomination for the following reasons:
O The Commission would like to make the following recommendations regarding the nomination: (use additional
sheets if necessary) :
Official Signatures Required Below
Historic Review Board Chair or Representative
Print Name: Christina Monk, Chairperson Approved j Not Approved
Signature:
Chief Elected Official
Print Name: Roy . Buol, Mayor Approved
Signature:
Professional Eval4ation
Print Name:
Signature:
Approved
Not Approved
Not Approved
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service/National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.1024-0018
EAGLE POINT PARK DUBUQUE, IOWA
Name of Property
County and State
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See insmuctions in National Register
Bulletin, How to Complete the Notional Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being
documented, enter 'N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only
categories and subcategories from the instructions.
1. Name of Property
Historic Name: Eagle Point Park Historic District
Other names/site number:
Name of related multiple property listing: N/A
(Enter N/A if property is not part of a multiple property listing.)
2. Location
Street& Number: 2601 Shiras Avenue
City or town: Dubuque State: IA County: Dubuque
Not for Publication: N/A Vicinity: N/A
3. State/Federal Agency Certification
As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended,
I hereby certify that this X nomination request for determination of eligibility meets the
documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places
and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CRF Part 60.
In my opinion,the property X meets does not meet the National Register Criteria I
recommend that this property be considered significant at the following levels(s) of
significance:
National Statewide X Local
Applicable National Register Criteria:
X A B X C D
Signature of certifying official/Title: Date
State Historical Society of Iowa
In my opinion, the property _meets_does not meet the National Register criteria.
Signature of commenting official: Date
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service/National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.1024-0018
EAGLE POINT PARK DUBUQUE, IOWA
Name of Property
County and State
Title: State or Federal agency/ bureau or
Tribal Government
4. National Park Service Certification
I hereby certify that this property is:
entered in the National Register
determined eligible for the National Register
determined not eligible for the National Register
removed from the National Register
other (explain:)
Signature of the Keeper Date of Action
5. Classification
Ownership of Property(Check as many boxes as apply.)
Private:
Public — Local X
Public—State
Public — Federal
Category of Property (Check only one box.)
Building(s)
District X
Site
Structure
Object
Number of Resources within Property (Do not include previously listed resources in the
count)
Contributing Noncontributing
Buildings 14 2
Sites 6 0
Structures 5 2
Objects 5 0
Totals 30 4
Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register 0
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service/National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.1024-0018
EAGLE POINT PARK DUBUQUE, IOWA
Name of Property
County and State
6. Function or Use
Historic Functions
(Enter categories from instructions.)
RECREATION AND CULTURE
OUTDOOR RECREATION
LANDSCAPE/PARK
Current Functions
(Enter categories from instructions.)
RECREATION AND CULTURE
OUTDOOR RECREATION
LANDSCAPE/PARK
7. Description
Architectural Classification
(Enter categories from instructions.)
LATE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURY REVIVIALS/Mission/Spanish Colonial
Revival
LATE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN MOVEMENTS /
Craftsman
LATE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN MOVEMENTS /
Prairie School
MODERN MOVEMENT
OTHER
Materials: (enter categories from instructions.)
Principal exterior materials of the property: STONE / Limestone; WOOD/ Shingles;
METAL/lron, METAL/Steel, METAL/Aluminum; CONCRETE; STUCCO; TERRA
COTTA; Asphalt
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number 8 Page 42
Narrative Description
(Describe the historic and current physical appearance and condition of the property. Describe
contributing and noncontributing resources if applicable. Begin with a summary paragraph that
briefly describes the general characteristics of the property, such as its location,type, style,
method of construction, setting, size, and significant features. Indicate whether the property has
historic integrity.)
Summary Paragraph
Eagle Point Park is a large urban park located on a wooded limestone bluff along the
Mississippi River just above Lock and Dam #11 in Dubuque, Iowa. The boundaries of the park
lie within the city of Dubuque in an area which is colloquially known as `The Point.' The park
is owned and maintained by the City of Dubuque and is open to the public from May through
October. This large urban park was conceived in the City Beautiful style in 1909 by Charles
Mulford Robinson and Charles Nassau Lowrie with panoramic views of the city, the river and
the eastern bluffs of Wisconsin and Illinois, tree-lined drives and a variety of amenities to
appeal to all ages. Nearly all the original plan of the park is intact and contains one hundred and
sixty-four acres which is bounded by the Canadian Pacific Railroad tracks to the east and north,
Lincoln Avenue to the south, and Shiras Avenue to the west. Eagle Point went through some
major changes in the 1930s to extend its usage to the winter months with the addition of park
shelters with fireplaces. These structures and features were designed in the Prairie School style
by Alfred Caldwell and his apprentice, Wendelin Rettenberger. The parks features take
advantage of local material such as logs, wood shingles and native limestone. Although the
park needs repairs and grooming, a high degree of historic integrity is evident today.
Narrative Description
General Description
Eagle Point Park is the largest urban park located in Dubuque, Iowa and takes advantage
of the natural beauty of its setting. The heavily wooded bluff is spotted with park
pavilions, gardens and spectacular views. The meandering roads guide visitors
through northern areas of the park which is thick with communal areas for picnicking and
athletic activities and through the secluded, intimate and natural qualities of the southern
reaches of the park.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number 8 Page 43
Eagle Point Park Pavilions
There are ten pavilions located in the park and their construction spans nearly 100 years.
From largest to smallest in terms of seating capacity those pavilions are: Riverfront Pavilion
(410), Open Air Pavilion (318), Bridge Complex (110), Log Cabin Pavilion (100), Eagle's
View (100), Shiras Memorial (48), Veranda Rooms (42), Terrace Room (40), Indian Room
(25), Tri-State View Pavilion (24).2 The styles exhibited in the pavilions are diverse and
express their particular period of construction. Some are free standing structures while
others are heavily embedded in constructed and natural landscape features.
Riverfront Pavilion
The oldest pavilion is Riverfront Pavilion, constructed in 1910 and designed by European born
architect John Spencer.3 The style as characterized by the National Register as the early
twentieth century movement known as Craftsman.4 This style has characteristics very similar to
the Arts and Crafts style of Spencer's native England. Riverfront Pavilion exhibits the
following features of those styles: rectilinear forms, porches with stone supports, low roof with
deep eaves, and a sense of hand craftsmanship. Much of the original character of the structure is
intact. This large enclosed rectangular building [30'x60'] is wood framed on a concrete
platform, sided with wood, and walls constructed with large wooden sash windows topped by
transom windows with x-shaped mullions. All of the windows have immobile screens. There
are paired doors on both the east and west facades and the building is surrounded on all four
sides with a 10 foot overhang supported by piers constructed of rustic pieces of native limestone
and mortar.
[Photo 40] Another unique aspect of the shelter is the retention and preservation of the original
oak picnic tables and benches created specifically for the Riverfront Pavilion. [Photo 42] The
covered concrete patio provides additional seating opportunities and on the north, south and
eastern faces of the building, fabulous views of the Mississippi River. Additionally,the eastern
patio is arched, elevated, supported by a limestone retaining wall and edged with a modern iron
fence. The only notable alteration to the building was the removal of the parapet screen, which
is clearly illustrated in Spencer's drawing and in early postcards. [Figure 3]
1 htto://www.Cityofdubugue.org/453/Eagle-Point-Park
2 Virginia Savage McAlester,A Field Guide to Amencan Houses,rev. ed. (New York,NY: Alfred P. Knopf,
1984 and 2013), p.567
3 John Spencer was born in York,England in 1856, moving to Dubuque in 1880.
NP8 Form 19900a OMB Approval No.
ffi10018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number 8 Page 44
-,,oZefch of JJaO!/ion.
-chyle oinf �ar.$.
FIGURE 3 Perspective drawing ofRiverfront Pavilion by John Spencer, 1910. Source: City ofDubuque Planning Office
Shiras Memorial
Shiras Memorial, which forms the southern point of the B1ufPs Promenade Edge, was built to
honor the man who had major influence on the acquisition and development of the park, Judge
Oliver Perry Shiras. Built in 1920, Shiras Memorial is an open air building in the
Mediterranean Revival style and characterized by its rounded arches, stucco fapade and red file
roof. The landscaping around the building has changed significantly since the view in
NPS Form 10 900 a OMB Approval No.
10210018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number S Page 45
sx�xns n ren,uxxE=ornr rnae,bveuque.
FIGURE Postcard of`Shims Memorial Shelter,Eagle Point Park,Dubuque' e1940. Source:The Encyclopedia of
Dubuque:First National Bank 1991.
Figure 4 was illustrated. The Memorial was designed by then Park Superintendent G.A. Heyne as a
`Rough Cast Concrete Design' and furnished with a `Red Spanish Terra Cotta Tile Roof from the
Ludivici-Celadon Company of 1118 Monroe Bldg, Chicago.'The arcaded building is 20'x30' has
bracketed two foot eaves and sits on a large concrete patio equipped with modern metal benches to
take in the views of the river and city. [Photo 51]. The pavilion has lighting on its interior as well as
a lamppost on the patio to the east of the building. Presently the interior vaulted ceiling is damaged,
requires repairs, but in no way threatens the stability of the building. [Photo 53]. On the
Robinson/Lowne plan,this spot is identified as `Eagle Point' and marked with hexagon form. A
polygonal building was constructed on SMras Point and the SMras Memorial was instead
constructed on the historic `Eagle Point.i6 Originally, the pavilion had direct access to the Gate of
the Rocks staircase and would have been the first building encountered when entering the park from
the south. The SMras Memorial forms the southernmost point for the promenade. The changes to
the landscaping around the pavilion occurred during the 1950s when the limestone retaining walls
were created to support the promenade and create the structurally stabilizing patio surrounding the
pavilion.
'Dubuque City Park Department Archive#0050-2
°Dubuque City Park Department Archive Robinson/Lowrie plan 1909
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`City in a Garden' Pavilions
A prime concern in the 1930s was the desire to create year round usage of the park with the
addition of heated enclosed pavilions.'The Bridge Complex, Veranda Rooms, Indian Room
with public restrooms,Terrace Room and Log Cabin Pavilion were built for year round usage
with the inclusion of large scale interior fireplaces. Alfred Caldwell was hired by the park board
to design year round shelters and conceived a grandiose plan which he titled`City in a Garden'
and included features which were built and unbuilt as shown in Figure 5. Only the buildings in
the center of this plan were actually constructed. Those built buildings are fabricated of native
limestone laid in an inregular stratified manner with wood frame windows and in the case of the
Bridge Promenade, half timber and stucco walls. The oldest of these buildings is the Indian
Room, designed by Alfred Caldwell in 1934.
FIGURE 5 General plan of`City in a Garden'by Alfred Caldwell, 1935. Source:Dubuque Museum of An DUMA A5
1934.
° Letter from Dubuque Park Commissioner Charles Landon to Alfred Caldwell, dated February 22, 1934. Folder C,
City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office,Dubuque,IA
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Indian Room
The first of the buildings constructed in the `City in the Garden' group is the Indian Room, designed
by Alfred Caldwell in 1934.8 The Indian Room is a free standing great room backed by public
restrooms to form a T-shaped plan facing the cardinal directions. The east fagade is mainly windows
and the western fagade has clerestory windows which flank the fireplace. The entrances to the
pavilion on the north and south fagades are situated behind exterior walls which define the
landscaped outdoor `room' facing the shelter. The cozy interior is dominated by a grand wood
burning fireplace and WPA era painted decorations for which the building gets its name.9 The
dimensions of the Indian Room are 25 feet square with a 20 foot height and a pyramidal roof. The
basic form of this building is reminiscent of Hillside School at Taliesin by Frank Lloyd Wright—a
building of which Caldwell was knowledgeable from his visits to the site. The north and south
wings which form the public restrooms are 15' by 17' each and project from the western fagade
of the Indian Room. Between the two restrooms is a projecting stone ledge which acts as a
bench and an amenity which points to Caldwell's great attention to detail in the functionality of
the building and the manner in which the materials were chosen and used. The Indian Room and
its flanking restrooms share features with Caldwell's other buildings including stratified
limestone exterior, deep overhanging eaves, massive fireplaces and chimneys and an emphasis
on the horizontal nature of the building, which are all characteristics which define Organic
Architecture or more commonly in the American Midwest, the Prairie Style.
Bridge Complex
The Bridge Complex has three built components: the East Room and North Annex which form
the north south portion of this cruciform shaped building; the Bridge Promenade spans the
eastern and western elements; and the multi-storied Lookout Tower on the western end of the
complex. The complex was designed by Alfred Caldwell in 1935 as part of his `City in a Garden'
design for the park. Caldwell's intentions for the building were very different than its present
usage as a pavilion only. His vision included a restaurant, kitchen, concession stand and private
dining room for the eastern range of the Bridge Complex as illustrated in Figure 6. The eastern
range is 132 feet long by 25 feet wide with two covered porches on the eastern fagade. The larger
of the two porches is 19' by 19', centered on the eastern front and defined by Caldwell as a
`Shelter.' In the 25' by 28' restaurant has a six-foot-wide stone hearth upon which the mantel
bears the inscription of`The Tree Returns the Life it Sucked from Stone.'10
e Caldwell refers to the building as the Stone Shelter House on his plans.
9 "Young Artist Scores at Eagle Point Park," Telegraph Herald, June 7, 1936,p. 17.
10 Caldwell was a poet and his colleagues oftentimes noted that his architectural works were `poetry in stone.'
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FIGURE 6 Partial plan illustrating the eastern range of the Bridge Complex by Alfred Caldwell, 1934. Source:
Dubuque Museum of Art E22, 1934.
The eastern range of the Bridge Complex has four inch flagstone and terminates in a massive stone
abutment. On the western end of the Bridge Promenade is a small dining room with a cantilevered
balcony, hearth and steps to the Lookout Tower. [Photo 27] Access on the western end of the Bridge
Promenade is made via the massive stone steps descending to the large stone patio containing both
the Indian Room with its attached restrooms and the Veranda Rooms.
FIGURE 7 Elevation of the eastern range of the Bridge Complex and its supporting superstructure by Alfred
Caldwell, 1934. Source:Dubuque Museum of Art,DUMA E23, 1934.
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The eastern range is supported by 3' stone piers resting on 5' deep rock fill while the bridge
is stabilized with steel girders. A ten foot cement patio fronts the eastern range of the Bridge
Complex, curving around both ends and forming elevated patios with ornate wooden fencing.
- � I
n/ ®f
FIGURE 8 Detail of the westernend of the Bridge Complex, showing the deterioration of the balcony and
its missing lighting fixtures. Source:Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan September 14, 2015.
The southern patio contains a covered garden bench and curves to the west with stone steps that
lead to the drive and a flagstone path to Open Air Pavilion. Beside the eastern entrance are
stone steps leading though a vaulted arch to the drive. Under each stone abutment supporting
the bridge water reservoirs were installed, fed by 5 cisterns on the bill to the east on the highest
geographic point in the park. These reservoirs became obsolete when the park was annexed by
the City in 1940."
The Bridge Complex has a low-pitched roof with wood shingles terminating in broad eaves
with copper flashing. The long, horizontal roof plane —an essential element of Prairie style
architecture—contrasts with walls of stucco in which the studding is flush with the surface,
creating panels encasing horizontal rows of casement windows under the eaves. The Complex
is in need of repair both inside and out, with the Lookout Tower in the most need of attention.
As can be noted in Figure 8, the balcony on the western end has noted damage on the exterior
and the entire feature of the complex has been closed to the public for repairs.
" Helen Mercer notes from incomplete National Register nomination of 1989;City of Dubuque Archives Folder C,
section F-11,p.2. City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office,Dubuque,IA.
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Veranda Rooms
The Veranda Rooms was designed by Alfred Caldwell, but completed after his termination in
1936 under the direction of his chief assistant, Wendelin Rettenberger. In keeping with the
other buildings in the `City in a Garden' group, the Veranda Rooms is a north-south building
with exposed studding on stucco for the eastern wall with the remaining walls compose mostly
of stratified limestone measuring 20' by 28'. Clerestory casement windows adorn the north and
south ends of the pavilion. There are interior and exterior fireplaces on the western wall [Photo
32] Transom dormers adorn the eastern and western sides of the roof, while 7 foot high
overhanging eaves extend three feet out from the walls. The building sits on a large flagstone
patio with a circular planter, retaining walls, a semicircular plaza with built in water fountains —
all constructed from stratified native limestone. [Photo 33]
Terrace Room
The Terrace Room stands apart from the other buildings in Caldwell's grouping since its
original purpose was as a tool shed and forge for the workers. According to a memo by
Wendelin Rettenberger, Superintendent of Parks dated December 10, 1937 the Veranda Rooms
which had formerly housed the workshop and pumping station for the building project had now
been converted to a picnic shelter and there was a need to create a new building `for housing the
project timekeeper, W.P.A. tools and materials' as well as a workshop.12 The building was
complete except for a chimney to be used as a stove and blacksmith forge. According to
Rettenberger,the building was `a sore spot and detracts from the beauty and value
of the new building group [`A City in a Garden' grouping by Caldwell]. 13 The Terrace Room is
17' by 35' and stands about fifteen feet below the grade of the main road and parking lot. One
approaches the building from a staircase from the parking lot on the Southern Gate Road and
the eastern fagade is dominated by an exterior fireplace. The north and west faces of the
building are composed with asymmetrical arrangement of windows and striated wall of native
limestone. The south fayade is constructed of wooden barn siding topped by stationary
clerestory windows. This modest building is topped by a hipped roof with asphalt shingles.
There is a concrete patio on the northeast corner of the building and a large oak tree shelters the
entire building. [Photo 7] This building was converted to use as a picnic shelter in 1958.14
12 Dubuque City Archives City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque,
IA. Folder C Memo from W. Rettenberger December 10, 1937,p.2
13 Dubuque City Archives City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque,
IA. Folder C Memo from W. Rettenberger December 10, 1937,p.3
14 Dubuque's Eagle Point— 164 Acres of Beauty, Telegraph Herald(1960),p.1.
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Log Cabin Pavilion
The Log Cabin Pavilion is the most recent of the New Deal era buildings in Eagle Point Park.
Designed by Caldwell's apprentice and park superintendent Wendelin Rettenberger,the Log
Cabin shelter is constructed on the southernmost point in the park approximately 350 feet above
the city and well below the highest points in the park. The Log Cabin was constructed by the
National Youth Administration [NYA] between 1937 and 1939. The north-south aligned
building is a 40 by 30 foot one room building constructed of stripped and stained logs that rest
on a two and one-half foot native limestone foundation. The cabin is capped with a low-pitched
wood shingled roof supported by exposed log roof beams.
C
FIGURE 9 Detail of the complex fireplace on the western facade of the Log Cabin pavilion. Source: Photographby
Dr. Julie Schlannan,September 23,2014.
There are covered porches on the east and west faces creating a cruciform footprint. The
building has attributes of both the rustic architecture principles of New Deal era recreational
buildings and then the stone work exhibiting the stratified ledges like that of Caldwell's `City in
a Garden' buildings and Rettenberger's other features. The Log Cabin rests on a limestone patio
which is surrounded by a two and one-half foot high limestone retaining wall. The western face
of the building has a large stone fireplace with three separate flues for outdoor cooking as
shown in Figure 9.
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Open Air Pavilion
Open Air Pavilion was one of the first Post- World War 11 improvements to Eagle Point
Park. This exceptionally large shelter was built to hold either one large gathering or three to
four smaller ones in a communal setting. This pavilion was designed by local architect Paul
Rossiter in 1954 and sited just south of the Bridge Complex and west of the Southern Gate
Road. In a memo dated January 12, 1955 by the Dubuque Park Board, Open Air Pavilion
was described in the following manner:
The piers and fireplaces are constructed of native limestone and constitute bearing
points for the laminated wood roof trusses, which in turn support a tongue and
groove horizontally placed roof deck. This eliminated unsightly purloins and
rafters, and heightens the beauty created by the mingling of stone and wood.15
I
FIGURE 10 Interior of the Open Air pavilion looking south. Source:Photograph by Dr. Julie Schhmnan September 14,
2015.
15 Dubuque City Archives City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque,
IA. Folder F, Memo from the Dubuque Park Board dated January 12, 1955.
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Open Air is a U-shaped building, measuring 40 foot on each side, with ten feet of overhanging
eaves and resting on a concrete patio. Fireplaces are located on the northeast, southeast and
northwestern comers of the building. Those fireplace piers are equipped with grills for
cooking, warming areas and shelves, plus electrical outlets, as shown in Figure 10. The
building can be approached from the west by a stone staircase and an ADA accessible concrete
walk and from the north by a limestone path from the Bridge Complex. The pavilion is well
suited for large family and community gatherings as it has direct and immediate access to the
Wading Pool, a play area with a large sandbox, swings and climbing equipment, the horseshoe
pits, and the Meadow which is frequently used for badminton, volleyball and softball.
Tri-State View Pavilion
Tri-State View is a modest covered picnic area on the eastern edge of the park, midway
between Shiras Memorial and the Log Cabin pavilion. The rectangular building is 12 by 25
foot consisting of four brick posts supporting a pitched wooden roof covered with modem
asphalt shingles. The shelter sits on a concrete patio with a concrete east-west walk from
Kramer Circle Drive. This pavilion was constructed c.1959. The simplistic design has no
defining stylistic character but provides an intimate view of the Mississippi River.
FIGURE 11 Tri State View Pavilion looking east over the Mississippi River. Source: Photograph by Dr.Julie
Schlannan September 14, 2015.
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Eagle's View Pavilion
Eagle's View Pavilion is the newest picnic building in the park. The pavilion is situated between
Riverfront Pavilion to the north, Shiras Memorial to the south and located on one of the highest
points in the park overlooking the Bluff's Edge Promenade to the east. Eagle's View was built in the
early 1970s to replace the Louis Arrandeaux Log House which had been moved from its original
location on Second and Locust Street in 1933 to the park and then moved again to its current
location on the grounds of the Mathias Ham House on Shiras Avenue in 1967.16. The design of the
shelter is in a postmodern take on the rustic architecture found elsewhere in the park. The shelter
consists of two piers of stratified limestone that act as both supports and working
fireplaces/chimneys. The superstructure of the pavilion consists of wooden trusses reinforced with
steel braces and topped by a complex roof which is steep pitched on the south side and low pitched
on the north. The overhang is 10 feet on three sides and on the eastern side is 18 feet deep. The
pavilion rests on a concrete patio with two concrete walks—one from the east and Kramer Circle
Drive and the other approaches from the north and connects the pavilion to the newest public
restrooms and the parking lot adjacent to Riverfront Pavilion.
FIGURE 12 Eagle's View Pavilion looking south. Source: Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman, September 14, 2015
16 httl)://www.enevelopediadubuque.org/index.php?title=LOG CABIN
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Other Structures and Resources in the Park
Also spanning the over one hundred year old history of the park are buildings such as public
restrooms and others which performed a variety of functions for park visitors. Other structures
and resources within the park include the park entrance kiosk,the Streetcar Stand, the Band
Shell, the water tower and a building (former concession stand) which is now used as
maintenance shed. There are also two small machines sheds, one to the west of the water tower
and the other on the hillside west of the Streetcar Stand.
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FIGURE 13 Entrance Kiosk facing northeast. Source:Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan September 23,2014.
Entrance Kiosk
The Entrance Kiosk on Shiras Avenue is the newest structure for the park and controls
traffic into the park. Due to continued vandalism in the park through the 1960s and 1970s,
the City of Dubuque began to enforce an admission fee to reduce the problems. The
entrance kiosk is a Postmodern styled toll booth,with stylistic reference to the Prairie
style/New Deal era structures and buildings contained within the park. The kiosk sits along
Shiras Boulevard only a few hundred feet from the main entrance. The building is 15 feet
square with a drive through awning on the east side supported by two piers of stratified
limestone. [Figure 13] The southern face consists mostly of wooden casement windows
fronted by a limestone planter for seasonal blooms. The access road through the kiosk
thenjoins with the Southern Gate Roadjust below the main entrance. Access to the
building is through a single door on the west face of the building.
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Streetcar Stand
The Streetcar Stand is located on the eastern side of the circular drive part of the Southern
Gate Road, midway up the bluff. The structure is a simple, rustic lean-to shed constructed on
wooden posts and siding on a concrete slab and footings. The slanted roof is covered with
wood shingles. [Photo 2] The building was once flanked by dual staircases and is dwarfed by
the enormous bald eagle statue and planter to its west. The stand was built c1925 and was used
as a shelter for visitors using public transit to the park. When streetcars were replaced by
buses, the stand was used by those patrons. The stand is now used for information and maps.
Band Shell
The Band Shelli?was constructed in 1958 and points to communal improvements that were
evident in the park in the post-World War Id era. The building consists of a concrete platform
used as a stage and topped by a sweeping cantilevered roof of wood and asphalt shingles. The
building has a storage/dressing room at its rear with access on the eastern side and from the
stage through wooden double doors constructed of native limestone. Access to the stage is also
available on the eastern face by a short staircase which is hidden from the audience by an 8' x 8'
screen wall of striated limestone as shown in Figure 14. The complex roof is flat over half of the
dressing room,then ascends dramatically at about a 70-degree angle to a height of
approximately 30 feet over the stage/concrete platform. This acoustic awning is also equipped
with lighting.
f
FIGURE 14 Band Shell, camera facing south. Source: Photograph by David Cobb Craig, 2010.
17Fine Arts Community Shell was the original name of the Band Shell.
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There are permanent metal benches installed for a modest audience to the north of the stage
and for large events guests often sit on the hillside adjacent to the Meadow. The building was
designed by the firm of Rossiter and Ham in 1958 to harmonize with the existing Prairie style
architecture within the park. The Band Shell has been home to the Tri-State Wind Symphony
for the last two decades.
Water Tower
The water tower at Eagle Point Park is a noteworthy Dubuque landmark. Its construction marks the
annexation of the park by the City of Dubuque in 1940. The tower was aNew Deal project,
constructed shortly after the City of Dubuque annexed the park. Water towers are a form of
community branding and a significant `signpost' for many Midwestern cities and towns, like grain
elevators,towers have become the rural equivalent of skyscrapers. The water tower is 50 feet in
diameter and 100 feet tall,which makes it easily seen from many parts of the city. In recent years
the water tower has become the home for turkey buzzards, which soar on the currents of air over the
river and then rest on this conspicuous perch, as seen in Figure 15.
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'.
FIGURE 15 Water Tower, camera facing north with turkey vultures sunning themselves on a cool autumn
morning. Source: Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman October 17, 2015.
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Concessions Stand
The former concessions stand which stands on the narrowest part of Kramer Circle Drive now
serves as a tool and macMne shed for park maintenance. [Photo 46] This building was another
important community,amenity in the park. The exact date of construction had not been
determined, but the rustic style of the building is in harmony with other New Deal era service
buildings such as the public restrooms across the road. This structure sits on a concrete slab
with wooden frame and large wooden sided awning style openings,Mnged at the tops so they
could be swung up to provide open windows and counters. The integrity of the building
exterior is still intact despite its new functionality. The building operated as a concessions
stand through the 1950s and 1960s and was often the hub of activity on hot summer days.
There are four handicap accessible public restrooms of two distinct styles with indoor plumbing
located in the following locales—A—midway between Open Air Pavilion and the Band Shell, B
—between Riverfront Pavilion and Eagle's View Pavilion, C—at the south end of the park near
the Log Cabin.
FIGURE 16 Accessible restrooms located between Eagle's View and the Riverfront Pavilions,camera facing south.
Source:Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlannan, October 1,2015.
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Restrooms A, C and D are of the rustic style typical of New Deal era architecture with the
facilities near the Log Cabin shelter constructed by the National Youth Administration at the
same time as the shelter, council ring and staircase to the shelter in the late 1930s. Each of these
facilities is a wood frame and sided building topped with a low-pitched roof covered with
asbestos shingles. The buildings rest on concrete platforms and are fronted with wooden
screens which obstruct the direct view of the doorways for privacy and modesty purposes.
Restroom B is the newest in the park added in the 1990s to provide an ADA accessible facility
close to the largest and most frequently used pavilion, Riverfront. This building was designed to
harmonize with others in the park in a Postmodern style which echoes the materials and scale of
the other restrooms but with a plan set diagonally on the site and including triangular limestone
planters on the north and east sides. The fifth set of public restrooms are attached to the west
face of the Indian Room, as previously noted.
Landscape Features in Eagle Point Park
The primary thoroughfares of the park are as follows: Southern Gate Road, Eagle Point Drive,
Memorial Drive, and Kramer Circle Drive. All or part of each one of these thoroughfares
appears in the 1909 plan of the park.
Southern Gate Road
Southern Gate Road is a 2-way road that leads from the park entrance on Shiras Avenue,
ascending the hill by doubling back on itself at the circular drive, passing through the Bridge
Complex and ending in the juncture of Eagle Point Drive and Memorial Drive.18 Near the front
entrance of the park, the road is intersected by the frontage road which park patrons must use to
gain access. The road is lined with mature hardwoods including many varieties of oak. As the
road then gently rises past the circular drive of the former streetcar line. The road progresses
past the horseshoe pits and other recreational features. The western side of the road is lined with
parking spots. Near Open Air and the Bridge Complex the trees along the road become sparse.
After the road passes under the bridge, it meets the northern parking lot and Memorial Drive to
the south.
18 Formerly known as Ravine Road in the park's early history and in the 1909 plan of the park. The lower end of
Southern Gate Road was significantly changed during the New Deal era.
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FIGURE 17 Scenic overlook of the Mississippi River from Eagle Point Drive; camera facing northeast Source:
Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlannan June 27,2015.
Eagle Point Drive
Eagle Point Drive is also a two-way road which runs the northern ridge of the park from the
parking lot between the Fish Pond and tennis courts to a sharp tum which intersects with
Shiras Avenue as it descends to the location of the former back entrance and gates. As the
drive traverses the top of the bluff the road provides scenic overlooks. Access
from this road to the park for vehicles has been obstructed by gates and fencing at the parking
lot which were installed to regulate park fees. There is pedestrian access to the park from a
break in the fence and parking spaces on the north side of the park for those patrons. On the
western boundary of the road is private property with a few homes popping up over the last 50
years.
Memorial Drive
Memorial Drive is a two-way road which begins at the juncture of Southern Gate Road and the
parking lot near the Fish Pond and ends at the parking lot adjacent to Riverfront Pavilion. The
drive is the shortest in the park and is tree lined its entire length with hardwoods.
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Kramer Circle Drive
i
FIGURE 18 Tree-lined Kramer Circle Drive with public restrooms[C] on far right; camera facing south. Source:
Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlannan October 1,2015.
Kramer Circle Drive is a one-way road which begins and ends at Riverfront Pavilion and
encompasses the southern section of the park19 The southern passage of the drive is tree lined
and contains parking spaces and wooded area on the western side for most of its length. The
drive then circles the water tower and progress north in a meandering fashion past pavilions,
playgrounds,paths, picric areas and scenic overlooks. Parking spaces are sparse on this side of
the drive, but it is also tree lined, with wooded areas to the east. A frontage road near the old
concessions stand links the two parts of the drive together. The drive then curves to the south
towards Shiras Memorial and its small parking area, and progresses north towards Riverfront
Pavilion where it terminates.
The drive gently rises to this portion of the drive as it dramatically opens up to a view of
the river and the opposing bluffs as it passes above the Bluff s Edge Promenade. The drive
is lined with trees on the western side,which also contains parking spots.
" Google Maps mistakenly identifies Kramer Circle Drive as Memorial Road.
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Southern Gate Road is a dramatic ascent through a heavily wooded lane which then opens to the
level area of the former streetcar stop,with a circular drive, planter, Streetcar Stand and other
landscape features. Encircling half of the circular drive is a concrete retaining wall,which is
intersected by the former dual staircases and the Streetcar Stand. A fiberglass statue of a bald
eagle dominates the scene. Perched on a 15-foot-high limestone pier, this c1990 exact replica
[10-foot-high with a 12 foot wingspan] replaces the vandalized original which was installed in
the early 1950s.20 [Figure 19]
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FIGURE 19 Eagle statue with plantings in foreground, Streetcar Stand and former dual staircases; camera
facing southeast. Source: Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman October 1, 2015.
20 This information was obtained through conversations with local citizens and their recollections of the park. There
may have been a stature of an eagle at this site since the 1920s.
21 Rettenberger was an apprentice at the part from 1924 to 1936 when he was appointed Park Supervisor. He served
in that position until 1952 when he retired.
Streetcar trail
There are a number of paved walks/paths in the park, as well as unpaved trails. A bicycle and
pedestrian trail leads from the south park entrance to the Streetcar Stand located in the circular
drive. This trail traces the old streetcar line which served the park from 1912 to the late 1920s.
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From the circular drive pedestrians ascend to the park elevation [884 feet at highest point] via
the steep stairs and path which flank the Streetcar Stand. Originally there were two sets of
stairs/paths and all that remains on each are the first two runs as shown in Figure 19. The
southern staircase has had all of the upper treads removed;however, the concrete stringers
remain in the upper runs of this staircase. The upper part of the northern staircase has been
replaced with a concrete path as shown in Figure 21. This path then intersects with an east-west
concrete walk that connects the Riverfront Pavilion and Band Shell with public restrooms.
FIGURE 20 Photograph of remnants of the staircase south of streetcar stand and portions of the concrete retaining
wall. Source:Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlannan October 17,2015.
Bluff's Edge Promenade
Allison Point
Shiras Point
Stone retaining walls
Mechanical viewers [3]
Southern viewing point
The eastern edge of the park permitted views of the Mississippi River,the Eagle Point Bridge
[demolished in 1983], Lock and Dam #11 in later years and the bluffs opposite the river in Illinois
and Wisconsin. The park sits atop a bend in the river and from the Bluffs Edge Promenade one is
provided views of three states. As one of the oldest landscape features in the park, this walk is over
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900 feet long and one of most favored features as well. Stretching from Riverfront Pavilion in the
north and SMras Memorial at its southern end, the Promenade is supported by limestone retaining
walls built up from the sheer rock face in the 1950s as illustrated in Figure 21. To the west of the
walkway is a broad lawn spotted with flowers beds. The walk itself is provided with mechanical
viewers, water fountains,benches, and tall chain link fencing. Concrete patios mark the historic sites
for viewing— SMras Point and Allison Point. To the south of SMras Memorial is an informal
walkway leading to a viewing point for the city and the river below the lock and dam.
FIGURE 21 Photograph of remnants of staircase[north of streetcar stand]; camera facing south. Source: Photograph by
Dr.Julie Schlannan June 27,2015.
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FIGURE 22 Bluff's Edge Promenade from Shims Memorial;part of Lock and Dam#11 on lower right; camera facing
north. Source: Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan September 14,2015.
Playgrounds [61
Eagle Point Park is rich with recreational areas including six horseshoe pits, six tennis courts,
a children's wading pool and six play areas with swings, slides, sandboxes and climbing
equipment. These facilities trace the popularity of outdoor games and sports since the park's
origins in the early 20'century. Traditional swing sets of metal pipes, chains and rubber seats
are still evident in all of the playgrounds sharing the same areas as modem equipment. During
the summer season,picnic tables are placed throughout the park and 88 permanent harbeque
grills on concrete pads dot the landscape. As running water was an early feature of the park,
fountains, spigots and water pumps are other amenities provided to visitors and widely
distributed throughout the puk."
22 `Eagle Point Park Plans,' Telegraph Herald,May 15, 1910,to. 16.
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Wading Pool
Meadow
Horseshoe Pits [6]
One of the main recreational areas in the park is adjacent to Open Air Pavilion. Here is
contained the wading pool with benches,horseshoe pits,two of the six playgrounds including
a large sand box and adjacent to the Meadow [Figure 23]. The Meadow near the Bridge
Complex and Open Air Pavilion has historically been utilized for games such as volleyball,
badminton and softball. This feature can also be noted in the Robinson/Lowne 1909 plan for
the park. The meadow is surrounded by mature trees.
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FIGURE 23 The Meadow from Open Air Pavilion with the Band Shell in the background; camera facing
east Source: Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan June 14, 2015.
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Viewing
Stone steps
Stone water Fountain
Cobblestone Walk
The early history of the park included two tennis courts and in the late 1930s there was a push to
expand this recreational feature. The new courts were added with elements and features designed to
harmonize with the other new features to which it was physically linked—Caldwell's `City in the
Garden' and the Fish Pond and Ledge Gardens. The tennis courts sit significantly below the grade of
the parking lot to its east [which was the site of the earlier courts] and on the same level as the Indian
Room to their south. There are two distinct approaches to the courts—from the south there is a
cobblestone walk sheltered by Lombardy pines and from the east there is a limestone staircase
complete with a viewing bench and water fountain as shown in Figure 23. The parking lot adjacent to
the tennis courts and fish pond is ledged with limestone—rough pieces on the western edge and
blocks of stone on the eastern edge—and contains log style signage and three circular stone planters
as shown in Figure 25.
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FIGURE 24 The water fountain,limestone viewing bench and parking lot edging with tennis courts in
background; camera facing northwest Source:Photograph by Julie Schlannan June 21, 2015.
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7'
FIGURE 26 Stone planter in parking lot adjacent to tennis courts. Source: Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan June 27,
2015.
`City in a Garden' Landscape Features
The New Deal embellishments to the park contributed some of the most unique forms of
Prairie style landscape architecture in the nation. This era included integrated landscape
elements and pavilions. The Bridge Complex, Veranda Rooms and the Indian Room with
public restrooms were conceived as a singular entity as illustrated in the model shown in
Figure 26. This integrated design includes both indoor and outdoor entertainment spaces
designed by Alfred Caldwell in the 1930s. One of the charming aspects of this complex is the
attention to detail in the amenities. Stone walls have projections which provide seating or
steps for children, a standalone covered bench, and piers which serve as a water bubbler as
illustrated in Figure 28. There are staircases, cobblestone paths and native stone patios which
encircle the buildings so they may be accessible and used both inside and out.
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FIGURE 27 Wood and plaster model of Bridge Complex—upper leftIndian Room and restrooms—lower right
patio,and Veranda Rooms on the far right as built No date for model. Source:Alfred Caldwell drawings,
models and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,Dubuque,IA.
The Bridge Complex spans the main drive and connects the East Rooms with the terraced stone
patios and semi-circular piazza which surround the other main pavilions on this locale, which is
in tum connected to other park features by flagstone walks. Supporting the East Rooms is a
fantastic superstructure of ledge gardens,vaulted underground staircase, and elevated patios
with decorative fencing. The patio near the Veranda Rooms has a circular stone planter for
seasonal blooms.
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FIGURE 28 Water bubbler, steps and semicircular stone patio in background; camera facing south.
Source:Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan September 14,2015.
The `City in a Garden' feature is mainly devoid of trees, consisting mostly of stone and concrete
patios and surrounded by sloping lawns to the west. Beyond the lawns are native woods. The
entire complex was an ingenuous solution to spanning a thoroughfare on a sloping piece of land.
Ledge Garden
Fish Pond Landscape Features
One of the truly unique elements in the park is the Ledge Garden and Fish Pond and encompasses a
landscaped area of the park which blends together picturesque and sublime elements. This elaborate
feature sits on multiple terraces with the pond itself about 40 feet below the level of the main road,
and creates the illusion of being in a large secluded oblong bowl of over 900 feet long. The
landscaping includes a prairie stream, reservoir, cascade,ledge garden composed of native stone and
a collection of council rings for small gatherings. Today the terraces are mostly grassy lawns
surrounded by the rock walls, rock ledges and trees. Caldwell's blueprint for the ledge gardens,
which is part of the Dubuque Museum of Art's archive, demonstrates the designer's desire to create
a feature with integrated native elements.'This would have included native woodland vegetation
such as trillium, bleeding hearts, violets, and lady slippers contrasting with the park board request
for a formal rose garden. °
2B Alfred Caldwell's `City in a Garden'plan, 1934.This drawing is titled `Rose Garden Rings' includes not only
plans but directives on plantings.
20 Chicago Architects Oral History Project,Department of Architecture,the Art Institute of Chicago,c1987. Oral
history of Alfred Caldwell interviewed by Betty J. Blum
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FIGURE 29 Ledge garden, camera facing south. Source: Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlarman September 21,2015.
Historic photographs and postcards illustrate the fact that the terraces of the ledge garden contained
flower beds with seasonal blooms. The author recalls the annual trip to the park with her Girl Scout
troop to plant one of the flower beds near the pond. The postcard illustrated in Figure 30 represents
the abundant display of woodland flowers and water plants that inhabited the ledge garden and fish
pond. The weeping willow trees that once surrounded the fish pond are no longer in existence.
Another important feature of the ledge gardens is the council ring, a circular bench which evolved
from Alfred Caldwell's mentor Jens Jensen,whom he had worked for from 1926 to 1931. Jensen's
influence on Caldwell is also evident in the gentle cascade,prairie stream and the meandering,
stepping stone limestone paths.
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1
i
Pool and Rock Garden.Eagle PoWr Pork
FIGURE 30 Postcard of`Pool and Rock Garden,Eagle Point Park', c1950 Source: Collection of Dr. Julie Schlarman.
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FIGURE 31 Photograph of the eastern council ring, 1935. Source: Telegraph Herald November 11, 1934.
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From behind the eastern wall of the fish pond, one travels about along the bluff s edge on an
unpaved, heavily wooded trail to the most noted of Caldwell's council rings. This feature gained its
notoriety due to its dramatic siting in which it sits like a turret on the edge of the bluff with stunning
views of the river in the background. The ring has fallen into disrepair and the unpaved paths to the
site have been recently neglected. The view has been obstructed by overgrowth.
FIGURE 32 Photograph of council ring public restrooms and part of the parking lot adjacent to the Log
Cabin Pavilion. Source:Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlannan September 14,2015.
Council Ring
Stone planter
Stone stepstwalk
Stone veranda/walls
Southern viewpoint
Another major area for landscape design during the New Deal era of the park was at its
southernmost point. Located below the water tower and at the southern end of framer Circle
Drive are the features designed to embellish and provide access to the Log Cabin Pavilion. On a
terrace between the pavilion and the main road, the Youth Program Administration created a
picnic area which included a stone planter for seasonal blooms, a council ring, playground, public
restrooms and a parking lot,partly shown in Figure 34. There is a cobblestone staircase which
leads from the upper terrace and parking lot to the Log Cabin below. There is also an unpaved
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trail to the southernmost lookout point from the shelter, which appears on both the
Robinson/Lowrie plan of 1909. This site is cleared of vegetation and has a metal bench to take in
relaxing views of the city.
Table of Contributing and Non-contributing Features
Map# Name C/NC Date Type
1. EAGLE POINT PARK C 1908 Site
CIRCULATION PATTERNS
2. Pedestrian Path C Structure
3. Vehicular Path C Structure
A. ENTRANCE FEATURES
4. Entrance Kiosk NC c. 1995 Building
5. Eagle Statue on Limestone Pedestal C c. 1950 Object
6. Curved Concrete Retaining Wall C c. 1925 Structure
B. WESTERN PARK FEATURES
7. Horseshoe Pits (6) C c. 1920 Object
8. Public Restrooms C c. 1940 Building
9. Wading Pool C c. 1920 Structure
10. Band Shell C 1958 Building
11. Oen Air Pavilion C 1955 Building
C. "CITY IN A GARDEN" FEATURES
12. Terrace Room C 1937 Building
13. Veranda Rooms C 1936 Building
14. Indian Room with Public Restrooms C 1934 Building
15. Bridge Complex C 1935 Building
16. Tennis Courts (6) C c. 1938 Structure
17. Circular Stone Planters in North Parkin Lot(3) C c. 1938 Object
D. LEDGE GARDEN FEATURES
18. Ledge Garden C 1935 Site
19. Stand Alone Council Rings (4) C 1935 Object
E. EASTERN PARK FEATURES
20. Riverfront Pavilion C 1910 Building
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21. Public Restrooms near Concession Stand C c. 1940 Building
22. Concession Stand/Utility Building C c. 1940 Building
23. Shiras Memorial Pavilion C 1920 Building
24. Southeastern Ci /River Viewing Point C 1909 Site
25. Triangular Concrete Patio at Allison Point C 1909 Site
26. Hexagon Concrete Patio at Shiras Point C 1909 Site
27. Eagle's View Pavilion NC c. 1970 Building
28. Public Restrooms near Parking Lot NC c. 1990 Structure
F. SOUTHERN PARK FEATURES
29. Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Building
30. Council Rings near Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Object
31. Public Restrooms near Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Building
32. Tri-State View Pavilion C 1959 Building
33. Water Tower NC 1940 Structure
G. NORTHERN PARK FEATURES
34. Scenic Overlook on Eagle Point Drive C 1909 Site
Integrity Statement
The following Integrity Statement for Eagle Point Park is based the Applicable National Register Criteria
qualifying the property for National Register listing:
A. Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns
of our history.
C. Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or
represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and
distinguishable entity whose components lack individual distinction.
The retention of specific aspects of historic integrity is evident in seven aspects of Eagle Point Park
that convey its local significance. The following sections discuss the seven aspects and explain how
they combine to produce integrity for Eagle Point Park.
Location
Eagle Point Park is a large community park located atop the limestone bluffs that overlook Lock and
Dam No. 11 on the Mississippi River on the northeast side of the city of Dubuque, providing a
spectacular view of Iowa, Illinois, and Wisconsin. This large urban park was conceived in the City
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Beautiful style in 1909 by Charles Mulford Robinson and Charles Nassau Lowrie. The tree-lined
drives, panoramic views of the city, river and the eastern bluffs of Wisconsin and Illinois offers an
amazing experience that appeals to all ages. Nearly all of the original plan of the park is intact and
contains 164 acres.
Design
The idea for Eagle Point Park was conceived in 1907 by local leaders. In June of 1908, 100 acres
were deeded to the city and became Eagle Point Park. Since the original purchase, 17 parcels have
been purchased or donated, which brings the park to its present size of 164 acres. Streetcar traffic
began to serve the park in 1912. Union Electric Company constructed the track, turnaround, and
waiting station in the area at the park entrance where the eagle statue and flower beds are found. The
Riverfront Pavilion and Shiras Memorial Pavilion were constructed along the riverfront promenade.
The park took on a new look in the 1930s when the City received a$200,000 Works Progress
Administration (WPA) grant and hired Alfred Caldwell, a gifted landscape architect. His love of
Prairie School architecture is very recognizable in the park buildings and gardens. Caldwell's
exceptional use of native construction materials, craftsmanship and unique designs make the park one
of the most beautiful in the Midwest.
After World War II, several open air pavilions, a band shell, and other park amenities were added to
Eagle Point Park. Since 1990, updated play structures, accessible restrooms, and landscape features
have been added.
Setting
Rugged and complex topography adds to the highly scenic character of the park. On a bluff top
overlooking the Mississippi River, Eagle Point Park is an area of natural quality for outdoor recreation,
with walking, viewing, sitting, picnicking, and restroom facilities. The park has several open air and
closed pavilions,horseshoe pits, drinking fountains, a seasonal lily pond with waterfalls and goldfish, a
band shell, and tennis courts. Other features are playground equipment, barbecue grills, nature trails,
flower gardens, and spectacular views.
Materials
Park facilities and amenities in Eagle Point Park make extensive use of native limestone and wood,
from the original historic pavilions to the recently constructed ADA-accessible restrooms. Native
limestone is found in buildings, landscaping features such as terraces and steps, retaining walls,
fireplaces and chimneys, and the fish pond. Wood is used extensively in buildings, including in the
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form of logs, framing, siding, shingles, and architectural features. Glass windows are found in some
of the park buildings.
Workmanship
These six WPA projects designed by Caldwell and built in the Prairie School architectural style in the
1930's reflect a high degree of workmanship with the use of native limestone and wood: Terrance
Room, Veranda Rooms, Indian Room, Bridge Complex, Rock Garden and Fish Pond.
Feeling
Eagle Point Park is considered both a community park and a regional park because of its size,
abundant recreational facilities, and many visitors from Dubuque County and the tri-state region.
Eagle Point Park is a community asset and a regional destination where visitors and residents can
reconnect with nature by experiencing the natural, cultural and ecological aspects of the environment
through cultured grounds and natural areas. Below is a list of the key park amenities that contribute
to the feeling that Eagle Point Park is one of the most outstanding parks in the Midwest.
The Terrance Room, Veranda Rooms, Indian Room and Bridge Complex were built in the 1930s as a
WPA project during the great depression.
The Riverfront Pavilion, built in 1910, is the oldest pavilion in the park. Riverview walk was constructed
in 1950 and quickly became the most popular area in the park.
Viewing towers are available to the public, showcasing the panoramic view of Iowa, Wisconsin and
Illinois, and Mississippi River Lock and Dam#11.
The Shiras Memorial Pavilion is located at the walkway's end and was built in 1921, in honor of Judge
Oliver Shiras,the local person most responsible for the park's creation.
The Log Cabin Pavilion was constructed in 1939 with funds from the National Youth Administration. It
overlooks Dubuque's Point area and downtown.
The Rock Garden and Fish Pond were also built as part of the WPA project, and are made of limestone.
A handicapped accessible walk extends north from the riverfront pavilion to the fish pond, avoiding the
steep rock steps along the way.
The Main Park Entrance road extends from the toll booth for a quarter of a mile. A turnaround was
constructed in 1912 as streetcars brought picnickers from downtown. On that spot today a large eagle
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statue and circular flower bed welcome you to Eagle Point Park.
The Trolley Line Trail is a one-half mile paved bike/hike trail that follows the route of the
original streetcar service to the park from the Ham House Museum parking lot on Shiras Avenue to the
turnaround, with a rest area including public art at trail midpoint.
Association
In 1973,the National Park Service determined that Eagle Point Park was eligible for the National
Register of Historic Places (NRHP). The park has multiple historic themes, contexts, and attributes
that contribute to its significance.
1908- 1921 Early Park Inception and Development:
Charles Mulford Robinson and City Beautiful Movement
The idea for the park was conceived in 1907 when Charles M. Robinson, a noted eastern park
specialist, visited Dubuque. After touring scenic locations in the city, Robinson made this comment
to his hosts: "I have never seen a place where the Almighty has done more and mankind less, than
Dubuque."
In 1908, 100 acres were deeded to the city and became Eagle Point Park. The Riverfront Pavilion,
built in 1910, is the oldest pavilion in the park. Streetcar traffic began to serve the park in 1912. The
Shiras Memorial was added in 1921.
1934 - 1939 Public Works and the WPA:
Alfred Caldwell and the Prairie School Movement in Landscape Architecture
In the 1930s, the City hired landscape architect Alfred Caldwell as Park Superintendent with a
$200,000 Works Progress Administration grant. The influence of Prairie School architecture is very
recognizable in the exceptional use of native construction materials, craftsmanship and unique
designs in the buildings and gardens.
Eagle Point Park is noted in the 2004 American Institute of Architects, Iowa Chapter publication,A
Century oflowa Architecture 1900-1999, as "A remarkable example of Prairie School landscape
architecture, the designer [Alfred Caldwell] referred to the plan as the `the City in a Garden.' The
park pavilions are constructed of a horizontal limestone similar to Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin
buildings, appearing to grow from the ground."
1954 - 1960 Post WWII Park Development:
CityAmenities oftheBand Shell, Open Air Pavilion and other improvements
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The park has several open air and closed pavilions,horseshoe pits, drinking fountains, a seasonal lily
pond with waterfalls and goldfish, a band shell, and tennis courts. Other features are playground
equipment, barbecue grills, nature trails, flower gardens, and spectacular views.
8. Statement of Significance
Applicable National Register Criteria
(Mark "x" in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property for National Register
listing.)
X A. Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the
broad patterns of our history.
B. Property is associated with the lives of persons significant in our past.
X C. Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of
construction or represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values,
or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack
individual distinction.
D. Property has yielded, or is likely to yield, information important in prehistory or
history.
Criteria Considerations
(Mark"x" in all the boxes that apply.)
❑ A. Owned by a religious institution or used for religious purposes
❑ B. Removed from its original location
❑ C. A birthplace or grave
❑ D. A cemetery
❑ E. A reconstructed building object, or structure
❑ F. A commemorative property
❑ G. Less than 50 years old or achieving significance within the past 50 years
Areas of Significance
(Enter categories from instructions.)
COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT
ARCHITECTURE
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ENTERTAINMENT/RECREATION
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
SOCIAL HISTORY
Period of Significance
1908-1966
Significant Dates
1909
1910
1912
1920
1934-36
1937-39
1940
1954
1958
1959
Significant Person
(Complete only if Criterion B is marked above.)
N/A4
Cultural Affiliation
Architect/Builder
Robinson, Charles Mulford
Lowrie, Charles Nassau
Caldwell, Alfred
Spencer, John
Rossiter, Paul
Rettenberger, Wendelin
Statement of Significance Summary Paragraph (Provide a summary paragraph that includes
level of significance, applicable criteria,justification for the period of significance, and any
applicable criteria considerations.)
Eagle Point Park has local historic significance from the acquisition of the first parcels of land
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for the park in 1908 ending with the 50 year National Park Service cut-off in 1966. With further
research, it may be possible to make a case for state or national significance. The park's historic
significance has been broken down into three concurrent themes. The first theme is concerned
with the park's early history and origins in the City Beautiful Movement and the national
leaders of that movement who were directly involved in the park design, Charles Mulford
Robinson and Charles Nassau Lowrie. The primary concerns of this national urban park
movement are landscape architecture, urban planning, social history due to concerns of
community wellness, and those pavilions of architectural significance. The first thematic period
extends from the acquisition of the land for the park in 1908 to the improvements made to the
park as part of the Works Progress Administration during the 1930s. The second thematic
period commences in 1934 when the City of Dubuque received federal funding to provide
improvements to the park which would permit year round usage and heated shelters. Alfred
Caldwell, a student of Jens Jensen and a proponent of the Prairie style of architecture was hired
by Dubuque's park board in 1934 and this thematic era will end with the retirement of Wendelin
Rettenberger who took over from Caldwell in 1936 and continued until as park superintendent
until 1952. The final thematic period extends from 1953 to 1966. This period is primarily
concerned with the building of shelters, playgrounds and landscaping issues. The justification
for extending the period of significance past the last historic building construction [1959] is due
to the continued usage of the park for its original function and to reinforce the significance of
the park's natural features as well as those that are built.
Narrative Statement of Significance (Provide at least one paragraph for each area of
significance.)
Eagle Point Park is an example of a park which has evolved in design and cultural
significance over a century. In order to describe the complexity of the park history this
narrative has been broken down into the following contextual themes in chronological order
from the origins of the park idea at the turn of the twentieth century to its recent past. Those
historic themes are:
❑ The City Beautiful Movement and Advocating Urban Parks
1908-1933
❑ Influences of the Prairie School: The WPA, Alfred Caldwell and His Legacy 1934-
1952
❑ Post World War II Optimism: The Baby Boom and Community
Concerns 1953-1966
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Through each of these themes it will be shown that Eagle Point Park is a locally significant
example of an urban park due to the retention of much of its unique history in material terms—
its buildings, plan and natural features. One of the chief concerns of the property's custodian,
the City of Dubuque, has been to act with empathy to its history. One of the practical functions
of this document will be to act as guidelines for further preservation and conservation of the
park and its historic resources.
The Origins of Eagle Point Park: The City Beautiful Movement and Advocating
Urban Parks 1908-1931
One of the pleasantest of the drives leading out from town is that which goes
to Eagle Point. One in going there passes through a magnificent collection of natural
beauties —not the least of which surround the palatial residence of Mathias Ham, Esq.
Green ridged banks, massive, rocky uplands, groves just bursting into a wilderness of
leaf and blossom, the imposing bluffs, the wide-reaching river losing itself in the blue
distance, the long stretch of greensward swelling, hollowed, flattened like some green
sea, all unite in making the scene one full of beauty and grandeur.25
In the preceding passage one is reminded of the writings of eighteenth-century and early
nineteenth-century English travel writers such as William Gilpin, Uvedale Price, John Claudius
Loudon and Joseph Mallord William Turner. Each of these writers and artists informed their
readers of the effects the sublime and beautiful in observing and picturing the natural and
rugged beauty of rural England and Wales.26 Likewise these travelers explored the works of
contemporary landscape gardeners such as William Kent, Capability Brown, and Humphrey
Repton and their writings and imagery helped to codify picturesque notions of the land. The
jardin anglais became the model of garden and park design throughout Europe and America
well into the twentieth centuy.27
25TheDubuque Dailey Times,May 9, 1859,p3,c2 as noted in Myers Naumann,Molly and Jacobsen,James E.Dubuque-The
Key City: The Architectural and Historical Resources of Dubuque,Iowa 1837-1955. Phase It Historical and Architectural
Report,January 15,2002,p.7.
26 The discussion of beauty in regards to the picturesque can find its early rumblings in Edmund Burke's Philosophical Enquiry into the
Origins of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful,1756. Specific examples of travel writers include Uvedale Price,An essay on the
picturesque as Connrpared with the Suhlime and the Beautiful...[London:1810];William Gilpin,Three Essays on Picturesque
Beauty...[London:1794];Joseph Mallard William Turner,Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast ofEnglcmd[London:1826].
27 John Claudius Loudon who wrote the`how to'text titled The Suburhan Gardener and Villa Companion
[London:1838]was a noted influence to American designers Andrew Jackson Downing and Frederick Law Olmsted.
Tom Williamson,Polite Landscapes: Gardens and Society in Eighteenth-Century England[London and Baltimore,MA: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1995],p. 165-166.
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Perhaps it was this early interest the natural beauty of Eagle Point that meant the lack of
development on the bluff in the nineteenth century. Interest peaked in terms of picturesque qualities
of the `Point' in the early 1900s. Oftentimes a visitor will lend a fresh eye to the beauty of a place
while the local may find it mundane or ordinary. The person who opened the eyes of many
Dubuquers to its urban potential was Charles Mulford Robinson, one of the national leaders in the
City Beautiful Movement.
The `idea' of Eagle Point Park has its origins in a national popular development in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth century called the City Beautiful Movement. `The premise of the
movement was the idea that beauty could be an effective social control device. "When they
trumpeted the meliorative [sic] power of beauty,they were stating their belief in its capacity to
shape human thought and behavior."28 The movement was a reaction to the rapid influx of
immigrants into the United States, the lack of healthy urban living conditions and diminishing
public spaces in American cities due to rampant capitalism. The City Beautiful Movement sought to
link notions of beauty with wellbeing and social order. The origins of the movement commenced
with the creation of the grounds and infrastructure for the World Columbian Exposition of 1893 in
Chicago and included architects and landscape architects such as Daniel Burnham and Frederick
Law Olmsted. Parks were central to the City Beautiful impulse and to Burnham's sense of
civic harmony.
"Fifty years ago," he explained, "before population had become dense in
certain parts of the city, people could live without parks, but we of today
cannot." Good citizenship, he argued, was "the prime object of good city
planning." Civic renewal more generally, Burnham believed, could
provide healthy activities to those citizens who could not afford extensive
traveling and who thus depended on the city for recreational and
cultural enrichment.29
In turn, the City Beautiful Movement had its origins in the Public Park Movement which began
in the middle of the nineteenth century. `The urban parks of that era emphasized maintaining
"picturesque" landscapes for"passive"use such as picnicking or touring to enjoy the scenery.
The built environment was often minimal, consisting primarily of curvilinear carriage drives
and winding walking paths from which to enjoy the views of the landscape. Bridges and other
structures were kept low and horizontal in form, often using rock from the immediate area.
28 William H. Wilson, The City Beautiful Movement[Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989]p. 80.
29htti)://www.eneveloi)edia.cNca2ohistorv.or2/na2es/61.htmI
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Rather than creating facilities for specific uses, large meadows and open spaces were provided to
support an array of activities 30. This movement abandoned the orderly and contrived format of the
formal garden in favor of one which drew its influences from the natural world—no
longer nature subservient to man but man in harmony with nature.Later in the nineteenth
century saw the rise of the Arts and Crafts Movement, which like the Public Park Movement,
`arose out of concern over the effects of the advancing Industrial Age. Proponents believed that
mass production threatened people's appreciation of natural materials and craftsmanship. The
use of natural materials, as well as an emphasis on simplicity in form, line, and function, made
Arts and Crafts Architecture fit well in natural settings.'31 The Chicago fair of 1893 was an
immense stimulus to this popular movement.32 Although urban planning on a grand scale had
been in place in Europe for many years, the first expression of this monumental style in the
United States was found at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago. After the
Great Fire of 1871, the city was essentially a blank canvas.
`The fair introduced the concept of a monumental core or civic center, an arrangement of
buildings intended to inspire in their beauty and harmony, as well as the beginnings of
comprehensive city planning--although in many cases the city planning was directly only at
the monumental core and public parks, rather than addressing zoning issues or affordable
housing.'33 Here one could observe the contrast of the styles of formalism and naturalism in
the City Beautiful Movement. `The neoclassical grandeur of the Central Basin was amplified
by the imposing Beaux-Arts buildings surrounding it while relief from the architectural
imperiousness (and raucous crowds) could be found in the heavily wooded shores of the
lagoon and the wooded island, where sinuous paths wound through apparently natural
growth...,34
30 www.fs.fed.us/recreation/i)ropTams See also Jordan,Harriet. "Public Parks, 1885-1914". Garden History
22.1 (1994): 85-113.
31 www.fs.fed.us/recreation/i)rouams See also Jordan,Harriet. "Public Parks, 1885-1914". Garden History 22.1
(1994): 85-113.
32 Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. `The Town-Planning Movement In America,'Housing and Town Planning. The
Annals 51 (January 1914):172-181,p.177.
33 htto://xroads.vireinia.edu/—can/citvbeautifuFcitv.html
34 Robyn S Karson,A Genius for Place:American Landscapes of the Country Place Era [Amherst, MA: University
of Massachusetts Press, 2007]pp.17-18
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The City Beautiful Movement was a model for early city planning and architectural unity and
produced a strong advocate in the form of Charles Mulford Robinson, who wrote the
following in his influential article on the fair. `...the thing that differentiated this Exposition
from all others was external beauty, that which was to be seen from the winding lagoons, the
promenades, and courts and plazas. To them one inevitably returned on his first day's journey
in search of the picturesque.35 Robinson's florid account of the Fair touched civic leaders
across the nation and propelled his new profession as a `civic advisor.' He published his first
major book on the subject, The Improvement of Towns and Cities, in 1901 which was a
pivotal text for urban revitalization across the nation. Robinson's influence was profound and
widespread through the dissemination of his published works on the discipline of urban
planning to his appointment as the first Professor for Civic Design at University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, one of two universities offering courses in urban planning with the other
being Harvard.36 Charles Mulford Robinson was a native of Rochester, NY and after
finishing his studies at the university there he traveled to Europe, where the cities he visited
will be the inspiration for later studies and recommendations to American cities.
He began his career as a journalist in Philadelphia publishing articles in journals such as
Atlantic Monthly and Harper's Magazine. His move to Boston in 1903 was followed by the
publication of Modern Civic Art in the same year. `His growing success led him to contribute
to The Architectural Record, The Boston Transcript,House and Garden,Landscape
Architecture, and The American City, among others. His third book The Width and
Arrangement of Streets was later republished as City Planning: with Special Reference to the
Planning of Streets and Lots 37. From Honolulu to Oakland, CA to Denver, Cedar Rapids and
Dubuque, concerned citizens asked Robinson for his expert advice in resolving their urban
ills and he published reports on how to reimagine their communities. Robinson's Report for
the Improvement ofDubuque, Iowa was presented to the joint committee representing
Dubuque Commercial Club, Civic Division of Dubuque Woman's Club, and the Trades and
Labor Congress. hi this report, Robinson advocated for the creation of a park commission
and development of large parks throughout the community. He concurred that there was a
lack of green space in Dubuque, with only two squares —Washington Park and Jackson Park.
35 Charles Mulford Robinson, `Fair as Spectacle,' in R. Johnson, ed. A History of the World's Columbian
Exposition, vol. 1,New York: D Appleton and Co. (1897): 493-512,p.498.
"Robinson's other works are Modem Civic Art, or the City Made Beautiful[New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1903],
The Call of the City[San Francisco and New York: Paul Elder&Company, 1909] and City Planning[New York:
G.P. Putnam's Sons,1916].
37 httn://tclf.org/oioneer/charles-mulford-robinson
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In his report he noted the glaring absence of large urban parks, neighborhood parks and recreation
grounds. And throughout this report one can note his fondness for the physical beauty of the city
and its natural ability to provide natural advantages to the development of parks:
It [Dubuque] occupies a wondrously beautiful location, nature not only pressing it
around with varied and picturesque scenery, but thrusting beauty of bluff or river
or view into its very street system, so that throughout the whole city one can
hardly ever be forgetful of the natural beauty of the site.38
Robinson's chief concern was Dubuque needed to create a park `system' that was harmonious
and could meet the needs of all of its citizens. According to other theorists of the time, `public
parks served to inspire republican virtue in several forms: civic pride, social contact,
especially between people of diverse backgrounds; a sense of freedom; and finally, common
sense (as in aesthetic standards and public taste).39Robinson was both a theorist and activist,
strongly advocating for the creation of public parks, and in Dubuque he clearly defines the
impediments in Dubuque and suggests the creation of a park commission as the first order of
business.40 Eagle Point Park is the type of green space that Robinson defined as a `large
country park, that inviting people out of doors give to them the greatest possible change from
urban conditions' and then insisted upon the implementation of parkways to move people
comfortably from one park to another.41
The last of a three-article series titled `Improvement in City Life' was highly influential and
propelled Robinson's profession as civic advisor while focusing on predominate urban problems
and advocating for the inclusion of green spaces with the addition of parks and tree lined streets
and boulevards.42 hi his report on the city of Dubuque, Robinson outlines urban improvement
on the whole, but the primary reason for which he was hired was the avocation of large public
parks in the city, of which Dubuque was clearly deficient.
" Charles Mulford Robinson,A Report for the Improvement of the City ofDubugue,Iowa, 1907, p.3.
39 Carmona, Matthew and T iesdaelt Steven, eds. Urban Design Reader[Burlington MA: Archit4ectural Press,
2007]p. 154
41 Charles Mulford Robinson,A Report for the Improvement of the City ofDubugue,Iowa [1907]p.7.
41 Charles Mulford Robinson,A Report for the Improvement of the City ofDubugue,Iowa [1907] p.5.
42 Charles Mulford Robinson, Improvement in City Life: Aesthetic Progress,'Atlantic Monthly, 83 (June 1899)771-
785,p.771.
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He suggests carefully choosing a site not only because of its aesthetic value, but the financial
considerations need to be first and foremost. He first suggests Kelly's Bluff, but if that cannot
be acquired then obtain the area which is now Murphy Park, on the south end of town 43 He then
goes on to state that there had already been an interest in the community to a develop public
park on Ham's Island and discusses the reasons why building there would not be beneficial to
the city and then recommends Eagle Point.
With respect to other locations, there is, beginning at the north, in Eagle
Point an extraordinarily noble site, the great wall of rock rising sheer from
almost the river's edge and affording superb views up and down the
stream. The street cars now go to the foot of a ravine, whence an easy
ascent can be made, if one does not care no climb the more abrupt but by
no means difficult sides...from further along on Seventh Avenue [now
Lincoln Avenue], the hill can be reached from behind at no severe
grade, so affording a pleasant loop drive. The rolling upland that forms the
back of the bluff is covered with an oak grove, already sufficiently thinned for
park purposes, while such a park as this demands no elaborate development
of planting. Its own wild beauty and stunning view, when roads and paths
have given it accessibility, would make it a park of which any city in
the world might well be proud. Let this go for building sites or an institution,
and the citizens of Dubuque will never cease to regret the lost opportunity;
secure it, and the wisdom of the mayor and aldermen responsible therefore
will forever be chronicled in the city's history.44
43 Kelly's Bluff is above St Raphael's Church and School on St Mary's Street, between Emmett and Third Streets.
Murphy Park is off South Grandview,just south of Highways 151/61
44 Charles Mulford Robinson,A Report for the Improvement of the City ofDubugue,Iowa, 1907, p.15-16.
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FIGURE 33 Ham [Hamm] Island can be identified in the upper right quadrant of the map to the right of Lake Peosta.
Source: Andreas' illustrated historical atlas of the State of Iowa, Chicago,Andreas Atlas Co. 1975,p 111.
According to Robinson, the Eagle Point site was accessible and essentially ready made for a
public park. As a result of his thoughtful assessment of the city's needs, Robinson's services
were retained by the city for the design of the park and the city as a whole. In fact many of
Robinson's directives in his report on the city of Dubuque were later utilized. For the job of
designing the park, the services of Charles Nassau Lowrie were retained.
Charles Nassau Lowrie (1869-1939)was a Yale graduate of civil engineering in 1891 and a
founding member of the American Society of Landscape Architects and its president from
1910 to 1912, and was active in the Society throughout his life. For thirty years, he was the
landscape architect for the Hudson County Park Commission in New York and designed the
master plan for the campus of Penn State University.45 Some of his earliest studies were for
state parks but he became known primarily as an authority on municipal parks and
recreational areas. For thirty years he was landscape architect for the Hudson County Park
Commission in New Jersey. He was on the Fine Arts Commission of the State of New York
for some six years and in 1938 became by appointment the first landscape architect on the
Art Commission of New York City.46
45 htto://tclf.or¢/nioneer/research-auery/charles-nassau-Lowrie
46 Norman T.Newton,Design on the Land: The Development of Landscape Architecture [Cambridge, NIA and
London: Harvard University Press, 1971]p.388
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FIGURE 34 Southern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and Robinson. Source: Charles
Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford Plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,Dubuque IA.
Together with Robinson, Lowrie will create a design for Eagle Point Park which took advantage
of the site's natural qualities with few exceptions. The actual plan for the park is enormous—
two 4'x4' panels—defining the key features for the park. [Figures 34 and 35] The southern and
northern entrances to the park are delineated and multitude of paths and trails are delineated in
the body of the park. Additionally,the location for the `Gate of the Rocks' staircase is identified
which ascended from the end of Lincoln Avenue linking it to the historical bluff known as
`Eagle Point' as seen in Figure 36.
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FIGURE 35 Northern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and Robinson. Source:Lowrie,
Charles Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford Plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,Dubuque.IA
FIGURE 36 Detail of the southern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and Robinson. Source:
Lowrie Charles Nassau and Robinson,Chutes Mulford Plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,Dubuque IA
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The park's earliest local advocate was Judge Oliver Shiras. In 1908, Shiras chaired a committee to
obtain the property for the park from A. L. Rhomberg for the city of Dubuque. Many in the city
thought that the park should be named after Shiras, but the judge deferred to the legend of Eagle
Point.47 Initially the park opened with only a few amenities such as a fence was erected along the
bluff for safety. Tables and hitching posts were installed, and Eagle Point Park opened in 1909, near
what is now the intersection of Shiras and Rhomberg avenues. In the very same year Lowrie and
Robinson were employed to create a formal design for the site.
During the park's early history,the entrance was quite different than it is today as indicated in
Figure 32. The entrance area included intersecting paths and roads, including a bridge which
spanned the streetcar line. The circular drive traces the former turn around for the streetcar which
served the park from 1912 to 1932. The park was serviced by the Dubuque Street Railway
Company which was founded in 1867 and Joseph Rhomberg was one of its early leaders and
investors. `In the early 1900s service became more elaborate and popular. Eighty-five cars were
placed into service with specialized summer cars that allowed breezes to cool the riders.48 The drive
down Rhomberg Avenue would have been enhanced by passing through the `Cathedral of Elms,' an
avenue of elm trees extending eighteen blocks and planted by Joseph Rhomberg in the 1880s.
49(Figure 37)
FIGURE 37 `Cathedral of Elms' on Rhomberg Avenue, first half of the twentieth century. Source: The
Encyclopedia of Dubuque,Dubuque,IA: First National Bank, 1991.
47 Andy Piper. `Beauty on the Bluffs Holds Legacy,' Telegraph Herald(Sunday, July 26, 2009),p.1
48 httl)://www.enevelopediadubuque.org/index.php?title=ELMS
49 Unfortunately all of the elms on Rhomberg and throughout most of the city were destroyed by Dutch Elm disease
which began in the 1940s and reached its peak in 1968. The majority of the trees were never replaced.
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The expanded use ofantomobiles led to the disconfirruafion offiolley service beginning in
1931 with the Eagle Point Live Ju be final line dosed50 Although trolley service ended,the
route was replaced by buses which operated to the stand unfit the 1980s_An early postcard of
the park entrance(Eigme38) shows that there was no shelter,planter or strode of an eagle
at this locale
FIGURE 38Frlytureotlen centuryportmrdof`Enhar¢eto Eagle Point Park DubuqueE915. Source The
Encyclopecha of Dubuque Dubuque IA FirstN#ional Eardk 1991.
The early plan of due park emphasized its pie"esque qualifies and safisfied the public's nofions of
entertainment and the apprefiafion of its aesthetic naturalness_
FIGURE 39 anytocurchen century eo4card of'Fngle Pomrotive'. Source Collection of a Jure Sdilarman
50 "Star[Move to a d Stedcm Service Here," Zeheweph zeralZ May 12 1931, p 1_
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The formal attributes desirable in public park design were the dominance of nature over the built,
with paved walks and roads to move the viewer throughout the space. This was a passive activity; a
place to take in nature's beauties. Within a day of the park's opening, a local newspaper published a
list of rules for behavior in the park which prohibited untethered horses, alcohol and vulgar
languages' Later custodians of Eagle Point Park were sympathetic to its early use and a great deal of
Lowrie's original plan remains intact. The tree lined roads through the park can be identified on the
1909 plan, with the southern end of Kramer Circle Drive and Ravine Road [Southern Gate Road]
being the only significant changes. Eagle Point Drive was partially lined with Lombardy pines, one
of the favored elements of the picturesque landscape. (Figure 39) There were parts of the 1909 plan
that went unfinished, but this was confined to the southern end of the park and included recreational
facilities and which were then added in the 1930s after Caldwell's departure. Lowrie had planned a
playground in this region of the park, well removed from most of the picturesque features such as
the Bluff's Edge Promenade and the Meadow.
The sheer rock face which is one of the defining natural features of the park is historically
known as `Eagle Point.' The naming of the bluff goes back to 1828-1829. As the legend
goes, a man discovered an eagle's nest in a tree near the town of Dryden, NY, east of Ithaca.
The young eagles were captured when the tree was cut down. One of the eaglets was given to
Roswell Randall of Courtland Villa, NY, who carefully raised the bird over the neat two or
three years. He later gave the bird to a neighbor, William Bassett, a local engraver and
silversmith.
On the Fourth of July 1831, Bassett released the bird after riveting
around one of its legs a silver clasp that read, "To Henry Clay,
Louisville, Ky., from Wm. Bassett, Courtland Villa, Courtland County,
N.Y." On July 11, 1831, according to a story that appeared in western
newspapers, a large bald eagle was shot by a Native American on
a towering bluff on the western shore of the Mississippi River. The
eagle, measuring an immense seven feet three inches from wing-tip
to wing-tip carried the silver band attached by Bassett in New York. 52
51 TH May 10 1910 p10 `Park Rules are Given to the Public'
52 Oldt,Franklin T. The History of Dubuque County,Iowa. Chicago: Western
Historical Company, 1880, Online:
http://books.google.com/books?id—u9xDAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA464&lpg=PA464&dq=Burton%27
s+Furnace+%28dubugue+historv%
w pas hso,all No.
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Since that date, the site of the eagle's death has cam ed the name Eagle Point and was first
adopted by Mathms Ham for the name ofhis proposed town below the bluff and later as the
name of the city's largest park. This site is identified on the Robinson/Lowrie 1909 plan for
the park (Figure 36) and became the site for the construction ofthe Shims Memorial in the
1920s. The `Point' sits lower that the rest of the bluffs edge and provides commanding views
both up and down the Mississippi River. The bluff also served as a navigational landmark in
the nineteenth century and can be noted in Mark Twain's pivotal tome on piloting the river.
FIGURE 40 Postcard of Slvres Memorial Shelter on Eagle Point and demolished Wisconsin
High Bridge,cl965. Source Collection of Dr. Julie ScLarni
We noticed that above Dubuque the water of the Mississippi was olive-green—rich and
beautiful s emitramparent with the sun on it. The majestic bluffs that overlook the river, along
through this region, charm one with the grace and variety of their fors, and the soft beauty
of their adornment. The steep,verdant slope,whose base is at the water's edge,is topped by
the lofty rampart ofbroken to reted rocks,which are exquisitely rich and mellow in color—
mainly dark brown and dull greens but splashed with other tints.:3"
S3 MarkTwaq Ly on rhedZseueWP4 [New York did London Haters Brothers Publishing, 1903] first published
in 1514, pp 431 432.
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County Iowa, 1906. Source: Iowa Geological Survey,Vol. XVII, 151B Muual Report 1906
Figure 39 provides insight into the condition of`Eagle Point' at the time of Charles Mulford
Robinson's visit to the city and certainly informed his resulting report on its urban conditions.
This photograph was taken from the western riverbank facing northwest towards the quarry
which would provide so much of the stone for the park and eventually for the creation of Lock
and Dam#11. One can note the relative sparsity of trees in on the bluff, this however is not
unusual in this district as much of the al was deforested during the W century for
construction of homes and boats as well as the smelting of lead.
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FIGURE42 Bluffs Edge Promenade from Riverfront Pavilion; camera facing east Source:Photo by Dr. Julie
Schlannann June 2015.
`Eagle Point' became the southern site of the Bluff s Edge Promenade and the
Robinson/Lowne plan notes three distinct sites from which to take in the views of the river
along this winding walkway. The panoramic views one would encounter in the park were an
important element of the park's City Beautiful origins. Figure 43 is a rare photograph of the
belvidere designed by Charles Nassau Lowrie as a historical marker for the position in the
promenade known as `Eagle Point.' The structure can be identified in the Robinson/Lowne
plan of 1909 by its unique hexagon design and the footprint of this structure is the only thing
that remains with the spot marked today with a mechanical viewer. (Figure 44) A promenade
is a quintessential element of the City Beautiful ethos because of the sense of community,it
infuses by flattering social class distinctions.54
50 Elizabeth Blackmar,, The Pmk and the People:A Story of Central Pmk(Ithaca NY: Comell University Press,
1992); p.133.
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FIGURE 43 Postcard of Belvidere at Eagle Point Park,Dubuque IA', c1940. Source: Encyclopedia of Dubuque 1991
x
FIGURE 44 Site of former Belvidere;'Bluffs Edge Promenade with mechanical viewer; camera facing east Source:
Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman October 9,2015
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In the early years of the park history the promenade was linked to a riverside stairwaywhich
was embedded in the bluff with major portions of the feature beyond repair today. `The Gate of
the Rocks' as titled on the Robinson and Lowrie plan provided access from the former
swimming beach on the river's edge to the park.
Figure 45 is a midcentury postcard illustrating this popular feature. The stairs became less
used when the beach was eliminatedwith the construction of the lock and dam in the late
1930s. As automobile usage increased, the stairs fell into disrepair and were finally closed in
the 1960s. Major sections of the lower portion of the stairwaywere completely obliterated
when a local business man blasted the bluff to make a high-rise apartment building on the
site of the old tollbooth ss
FIGURE 45 `Riverside Stairway Leading to Eagle Point Park,Dubuque',Source: The Encyclopedia of Dubuque 1991
ss Parks,Bryce. Bryce's Version ofWodd Everds,' Dubuque 365ink(April 6-20,2006): 4. Also see B1gRiver
Magazine,Jamary-February 2007, P.M.
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One clue that the `Gate of the Rocks' was still in full use during the 1940s was the installation
of a water fountain at its top and along a path which lead to the Shiras Memorial. As noted
previously, Shiras Memorial marks the historic site of'Eagle Point' and pays honor to the man
who was largely responsible for the construction of the park, Judge Oliver Shiras. Classically
inspired architecture was a dominant feature of City Beautiful landscapes and drawings from
Dubuque's Park Department illustrates the desired plantings, ornaments and details on the
Memorial." (Figure 46) The Memorial was not faced with rubble as illustrated in the elevation
but with the `rough cast' concrete as shown on the precipice wall. It is unknown whether the
decorative urns and fountain were utilized in the finished design of the structure. Despite these
omissions or alterations Shiras Memorial has maintained a high degree of its original fabric and
thus its historic significance.
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FIGURE 46 Detail of`SMras Memorial Shelter'plan and elevation. Source: Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman
October 1,2015
" Heyne, G.A. drawings and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,Dubuque, IA.
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Creating the northern terminus of the Bluffs Edgepromeuade is Riverfront Pavilion,the
oldest structure in thepark. As previously notedthe pavilion was designed by European born
architect John Spencer in a style defined as Craftsman with characteristics of the Arts and
Crafts style ofthe architect's native England One of the elements ofthe building's design
which points to his homeland was Spencer's approach to thelimestone piers. This treatment of
the material can be voted in the garden architecture at English estates such as Stowe, Cniswick
and Studley Royal. Ems manipulation of the native stone was to imitatethe character of the
Italianopoman stone known as tufa,which has either been used or imitated in rural architecture
in England for hundreds ofyears. This technique of rusticating stone was truly rare to the
Midwest and to Dubuque in particular where the fabrication with limestone for domiciles and
retaining walls is typically dressed or rough faced andlaid in a regular bond With the
retention ofits originality, less theparapet ornamentation on the rootline, Rivertront Pavilion
plays a significant role in the history of the park. Its inclusion of the 1909 Robinson/Lowrie
plan further defines its historic significance
Additionally the pavilion is still used for its original function. Riverfront Pavilion is heavily
used in season for large groups and celebrations. The annual official opening of the park has
been the Northeast Iowa Boy Scout Council Order ofthe Arrow's Mother's Day Pancake
Breakfast which has been held in the Riverfront Pavilion for 58 years.
FIGURE 47 Postcard of Old Log Cabinshellerat Eagle Point Park c 1950. Source The Encyclopedia of Dubuque
1991
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Oftentimes public parks would contain mementoes of a community's early history and Eagle
Point Park was no exception. The Louis Arrandeaux Log House [1827], considered to be one of
the oldest settlement era structures in the state, was moved from its original location on Second
and Locust Streets to Eagle Point Park where it served as a picnic shelter. [Figure 47] After
some consideration and a disapproving public,the cabin was moved again to its present location
on the grounds of the Mathias Ham House in 1967.57 The site of the Log House was vacant for
some years until the Eagle's View Pavilion was built in the 1970s due to the high demand for
covered shelters in the park.
The park's wading pool is still one of the most popular places on those hot sultry summer days
which are quite common along the Mississippi River Basin. It can be determined that this feature
pre-dates the Caldwell era as there is a plan in the collection of his drawings which suggested
improvement to the decking surrounding the feature.58 Although this is not a feature which appears
in the 1909 plan [there was a music stand proposed for this location], the wading pool construction
indicates a change in the functions of the park by the 1920s with a move towards more recreational
usage of the park. Another recreational feature which does not appear in the Robinson/Lowrie plan
was two tennis courts. These courts were destroyed in the 1930s to create the parking lot which
served the six new tennis courts to the west. The Meadow was the only site in the 1909 plan with a
recreational function which was actually built, since the playground and recreational area on the
southern part of the park were never constructed as previously noted.
Throughout the park's history there has been care and consideration made to the trees and
wildlife contained therein. Significantly the park is a continuous record of the favored
plantings and trees throughout different stylistic landscape eras in the American Midwest.
Included in this landscape are the preservation of the native species and the introduction of
both compatible and incompatible non-native species. The park has an exceptional collection
of natural vegetation and wildlife, with some of its trees dating back to before the park's
existence. The following passage from the Telegraph Herald in 1934 documents the trees and
shrubs during the earliest period of the park's history and additions during the WPA era.
57 htti)://www.enevelopediadubuque.org/index.php?title=LOG CABIN
58 DUMA GI, 1934,Caldwell, Alfred drawings and plans. Dubuque Museum of Art [DUMA], Dubuque, IA.
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Among the native trees that nature itself has placed within the confines
of Eagle Point park are red oak, black oak, white oak, burr oak,
white birch, black cherry, pin cherry, choak cherry, hawthorne crab apple,
cottonwood, gray populars [sic], linden, white elms, red elms,juneberry,
aspen, willows plum and sycamore. Among the oaks white and black
predominate, and there are some very fine groves of linden.
Among the trees that have been planted in the park are pines,
spruces,junipers and sugar maples. All but the later were planted many
years ago, and a number of sugar maples were planted this year.
Native shrubbery that occur in the park include gray dogwood, red
dogwood, smooth sumac, staghorn sumac, bittersweet, sheepberry, roses
and many other varieties.59
Today,the oaks still dominate the landscape, especially along the drives and shelters. Their
canopies rise and spread as much as 80 to 100 feet. Most of the trees along the winding drives
of the park can be noted to this early history and the picturesque qualities of the park.
The list which follows outlines the extant buildings and features which contribute to the park's
historical significance during its early history. This includes two pavilions —Riverfront and
Shiras Memorial—and picturesque features such as the promenade, meadow and drives. As
previously noted, this thematic era extends from the inception of the park through the hiring of
Alfred Caldwell in 1933. This era expresses City Beautiful design and its picturesque qualities
to the creation of urban parks as well as the national efforts in the establishment and
application of urban planning principles to towns and cities across the nation.
Influences of the Prairie School: The WPA, Alfred Caldwell and His Legacy 1934-1952
The second historic theme extends from the hiring of landscape architect Alfred Caldwell to
the retirement of his former assistant and replacement, Wendelin Rettenberger in 1952. The
general condition of the park during this era was one of improvements and adjustments for
the changing needs of the park's visitors. The main purpose of the park also changed from
the passive activities of strolling for appreciating the picturesque qualities of the scene to one
focused on communal activities, such as picnicking, recreation, sports and yearlong usage.
This era also marks a new style of landscape design, not completely alien to the park's
picturesque qualities, but certainly one with a new stylistic approach.
59 "Many Trees in Dubuque Centuries Old, Some of Them are Older Than City," Telegraph Herald and Times
Journal, September 16, 1934, p. 3.
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The principles of the Prairie style of landscape gardening depend on the conservation of the
native. According to the landscape movement's founder, Wilhelm Miller, those principles are:
the conservation of native scenery; and restoration of local vegetation and the repetition of the
dominate line, which in the Great Plains of the American Midwest is the horizontal.60 This linear
quality will be repeated in both the built landscape features and the formal qualities of the
buildings. The landscape should be married to the architecture creating a seamless visual
experience—as the land is long and low so should the structure. hi the words of Miller, the
design of the park/garden should meet the `practical needs of the middle- western scenery, by
restoration of local color, and by repetition of the horizontal line of the land or sky which is the
strongest feature of prairie scenery.61
One of the greatest proponents of the new style of Prairie landscape design will be the Danish born
Jens Jensen, who was also the teacher and mentor of the young Alfred Caldwell. Jensen is credited
with creating over 600 parks and gardens in the Midwest during his career as well as being driving
force in the establishment of the Illinois State Park system. Jensen was `no longer content with
harmonies of form, line, color and texture in the abstract sense, but chose instead to work with
harmonies learned from nature's own arrangements of species within a given area.62 He was a
conservationist and strove to create spaces which took advantage of the native species. It appears that
the most influential of Jensen's projects for Caldwell and Eagle Park were features created for
Columbus Park in Chicago [1910] —the council ring, the prairie stream and ledge garden. Jensen's
use of council rings was established by the time of the Columbus Park creation. These circular
benches provide insight into Jensen's notions of how the park would be used. `Jensen believed that
the democratic spirit was created when people came together, all seated at the same level around a
central fire pit. For him, this seating arrangement suggested times with the early pioneers on the
wilderness frontiers and with our Ameridian [sic] forebears at a council gathering.63 As seen in
Figure 45, Caldwell paid homage to his master with strong references to the waterfall and prairie
stream at Columbus Park for his design for Eagle Point Park's fish pond and ledge gardens.
60 Wilhelm Miller, The Prairie Spirit in Landscape Gardening [Amherst and Boston: University of Massachusetts
Press, 1915]p.2.
61 Wilhelm Miller, The Prairie Spirit in Landscape Gardening [Amherst and Boston: University of Massachusetts
Press, 1915] p.5.
62 Robert E. Grese,Jens Jensen:Maker of Natural Parks and Gardens(Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1992),p10.
63 Robert E. Grese,Jens Jensen:Maker of Natural Parks and Gardens(Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1992),p 82.
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The era of the Great Depression brought about massive government funded programs to put
people back to work. The Civilian Conservation Corps [CCC] began in 1933 and employed
professional architects and landscape architects to repair and improve the nation's parks and green
spaces on the federal, state and local levels.
d
FIGURE 48 Jens Jensen's waterfall and prairie stream at Columbus Park, Chicago 1910. Source: Chicago Historical
Society `The electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago 2005
By March 1936,the WPA [Works Progress Administration—the successor to the CCC]
employed 3.4 million people. When it ended in 1943,the program had funded 651,000 miles of
road work, constructed or improved 124,000 bridges, 125,000 public buildings and 8,192 parks.
Eagle Point Park was one of those parks chosen for improvement.
In 1934, after lobbying efforts by local citizens in Washington DC, Dubuque was awarded WPA
monies for the employment of local persons. Officially known as Work Project#24,Eagle Point
Park was slated for improvements and the grant required a professional as overseer of the
project and its funds. A mutual acquaintance of a Park Board member recommended Alfred
Caldwell for the position of park superintendent and overseer of the WPA project. When
Caldwell visited with city officials and was offered the job on the spot, he conditionally
accepted if he could design the buildings and gardens. Reportedly overnight he came up with
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the plans for the Stone Shelter [Indian Room and Restrooms]. In an oral history of Caldwell, the
architect recounts this event.
"I don't know where it came from. All they told me was, "This is a building. We'd like to have
maybe heat in it. People come up into Eagle Point Park it is a sublime park you know, way
above the top of the Mississippi and we'd like to have open fireplaces and people can sit and
have a little party in the wintertime. You should always have that in mind. A stone shelter
house." In fact, that's finally what I called it, the Stone Shelter House. Then he said, "There
should be toilets in there somewhere." The lower wing is just toilets on both sides. I
don't know how I got the idea, but I got it all that night. It all came, it all came. It's not hard. I
get the schemata of a building very easily. What takes the time is working all this out.64
Alfred Caldwell [1903-1998] worked for Jensen from 1927 to 1932 and then started his long
and distinguished career as an architect and landscape architect, with other notable designs of
the Lily Pond at Lincoln Park in Chicago and collaborations with Mies van der Rohe. He was
a professor at Illinois Institute of Technology where he helped to establish their program in
architecture and then moved on to teach for twenty years at the University of Southern
California. The job for the City of Dubuque as Park Superintendent launched his career as a
designer.
FIGURE 49 Caldwell's `Preliminary Location Plan' of 1935. Source:Dubuque Museum of Art DUMA A3, 1934.
64 Oral history of Alfred Caldwell interviewed by Betty J. Blum, compiled under the auspices of the Chicago
Architects Oral History Project,Department of Architecture,the Art Institute of Chicago, c1987. pp.46-47.
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Alfred Caldwell was hired in 1934 as Park Superintendent. His initial work was to assess the
vegetation, resulting in the creation of horticultural garden to propagate native trees, shrubs and
flowers. At the bottom of the southwestern bluff of the park and to the rear of the Park's
greenhouses, Caldwell established terraces of stone and wood for the propagation of those plants and
trees.65 After his first year, he notes the changes to the park in a memo to the Park Board: ...the
following projects have been under construction and are now in various stages of completion:
1. A stone shelter house with wings contains toilets and showers, the
shelter building containing fireplaces on main and balcony levels.
2. A terrace garden constructed on stepped ledges above the last bluff of
the park.
3. A series of stone Council Rings (one near completion). These rings
provide camp fire, picnic facilities, each ring large enough for a
group of 20 to 30 persons.
4. Reforestation, mainly in thinned work areas. The following plants were
planted:
3200 10 ft. Sugar Maple
800 10 ft. White Birch
100 5 ft. Walnut
600 3 ft. Red Cedar
200 3 ft. Juneberry
200 3 ft. Sheepberry
300 3 ft. Native Plum
300 2 ft. Rosa Letigera
5. A nursery was established for the growing of native plants for park use.
6. Foundations for reservoir and pump house.66
65 `Horticultural Garden Being Developed Here,' Telegraph Herald(November 4, 1934).
66 City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque,IA. Folder G,Alfred
Caldwell, first year report,p2
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FIGURE 50 Landscaping around the Veranda Rooms, c1936-1940. Camera facing northwest. Source:Photo by
Dr. Julie Schlarman September 14, 2014.
Caldwell's initial plans for the `City in a Garden' project were elaborate and over time were scaled
back out of financial necessity. Also, the functioning of the buildings in the complex will change
drastically from the original intentions.
The Bridge Complex never contained a restaurant, dining rooms or a concession stand, but was
continuously utilized as a picnic shelter. As seen in an early plan by Caldwell, the `City in a
Garden' project would include covered walkways, a geometric lily pond, restrooms, a covered
shelter and a 226-foot-long picnic pavilion, illuminated with decorative lanterns.
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. .
i
� . ,y . . . . . . . . _
LF
Figure 51 Detail of Caldwell's `City in a garden plan showing the Bridge Complex on the far left. Source: Dubuque
Museum of Art,DUMA A5, 1934.
At the end of his two year tenure as Park Superintendent,the staff of 200 WPA workers were
nearing completion on the `City in a Garden' landscaping, the Ledge Garden and Fish Pond with
two council rings, horseshoe pits, and improvements to the wading pool. The only completed
work in early 1936 was the Indian Room [and its restrooms], the easternmost council ring and the
Bridge Complex.
Caldwell: There were three buildings. I would have done all that for years and
years, but they wanted to hire a Dubuque man as the superintendent. I was obliged
to go. I had carried them over this and so that came to an end.
Blum: How many of the shelter houses did you actually design and build?
Caldwell: I built all that they have. Later on they built another
thing. I made a plan for it and they executed it. I saw a little piece of it
when I was there, about twenty-five years ago. It wasn't very good, but it
wasn't very bad either. That followed more or less what I wanted to do.
What I really built was the Stone Shelter House [Indian Room], the bridge
and reservoir, and a restaurant at the end of the bridge and reservoir
[Bridge Complex]. That's two buildings and the bridge would be a third
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building. Then, I wanted to have a workshop for the staff of the
park. When you have a rainy day what are you going to do with this
staff of people? The only place they could go would be down the hill, all
the way down on the bottom, and then an inadequate place there. I
built this workshop and I made it very, very nice. It's a handsome building,
a small building [Veranda Rooms]. That would make the fourth building.
The terraces were nice, the paving was beautiful, that which I did.
After I left they did some themselves that has been terrible. The stuff we
did was very carefully done.67
In the previous statement, Alfred Caldwell clears up any misconceptions about his
involvement in Eagle Point Park in Dubuque. Urban myth has misinterpreted the history of
the park in many ways including attributing the Caldwell buildings to Frank Lloyd Wright and
crediting Caldwell with all of the buildings in the park. In his own words he defines his
contributions to the `City in the Garden' features as well as the fish pond and ledge garden.
Caldwell was exceptionally exacting in his work and expected the same from his laborers.
This attention to detail was extremely time consuming and was listed as one of the reasons
Caldwell was dismissed from his position. The designer's brief tenure in the city of
Dubuque left a lasting impression as expressed in the features completed after his
departure, but he also had his share of critics as well.68
67 Oral history of Alfred Caldwell interviewed by Betty J. Blum, compiled under the auspices of the Chicago
Architects Oral History Project,Department of Architecture,the Art Institute of Chicago, c1987; pp.46-47.
68 The notion of a bridge structure in the park predates Caldwell's era and it is evident from the drawings in DUMAS
collection of Caldwell drawings that he was aware of this feature. Plan Al is a tracing in Caldwell's hand of the
Lowrie/Robinson plan. Caldwell will later obliterate the original entrance and its features for the present entrance
into the park. He was criticized for this action because of the destruction of old trees along the `Ravine Road' which
served as the original entrance.
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FIGURE 52 Alfred Caldwell [far left] inspecting stones for the floor of the lily pond, c 1935.
Source: Telegraph Herald November 18, 1934.
Eagle Point Park won a national W.P.A. design award in 1936, and Franklin Delano and
Eleanor Roosevelt visited the site during the 1936 presidential campaign. Upon seeing
Caldwell's work, President Roosevelt remarked that"this is my idea of a worthwhile
boondoggle." Caldwell was subsequently fired from this job,just as he would be fired from
most of the jobs he would ever have.'69 Caldwell left a huge financial debt in his wake with
the entire $200,000 project fund (about$2.9 million in today's dollars) spent and projects
incomplete.70
69 httn://tcIf.org/pioneer/alfred-caldwell/biograohy-alfred-caldwell
70 Andy Piper, `Beauty on the Bluffs Holds Legacy,' Telegraph Herald(Sunday, July 26, 2009),p.1.
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AnAcr contnbutng factor to CaldwelPs dismissal was as removal of earlier elements in
ate park design, and in partcular marry beloved trees. Eagle Point Dnve was partially limed
m [a Lombardypines, one of the favored elements ofate picNresque Iardscape as soon in
i
FIGURE 53 Postern ofLombmnyp ms wEaOe PuuDnI c1920.Sowee'. Cor ectmi of Dr Jule Seummm
Figure 50. These pines were removed by Allied Caldwell in 1935. The community was equally
unhappy with ate removal of hundreds of tees along ate Ravine Road for the Qeation of ate
Souther Gate Road hornits base a[ Shiras Avenue [o [he tircular dnve curio StreetcarS[wd.
Theresultof actons ledto CaldwelPs cvwNal dismissal homhis position as Park
Supeiintendwtin early 1936.
The mw who was selected to take over aft¢ Caldwell was one ofhis [aree assistwts wd
Dubuque natvg Wendelin Retenberg¢. A great deal was completed under tus I®glhy teem
as supenntwdwt—tom 1936 to 1952. Wi[a Retenberg¢ atate helm, ate City in ate
Garden', ledge garden wd fish pond [nota small job] wd ate following pmj ecat were
completed. Six new tennis courts were buil[[o the specifications of[he International Terris
Associationjus[[o ate north of[he Indies Room wd ate old cowls were converted into a
parking lot Retenberger added decorative elements [o [hese mundwe features including the
staircase m ate new courts coolplw[ers for trees in ate newparatng lo[.
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In 1940 the park was annexed by the city of Dubuque. Subsequently the water tower,water
mains and sewers were installed.
FIGURE 54 National Youth Administration Log Cabin project Council ring,public restrooms,playground with
Log Cabin Pavilion barely visible in center back. Source:Photograph by Dr.Julie Schlannan September 14, 2015.
At the south end of the park, Rettenberger supervised another large building project—the
Log Cabin Pavilion, council ring, parking lot and public restrooms—completed between
1937 and 1939. He also had to do this without a large force of skilled labor since most of
those workers had been moved from the park to the construction of Lock and Dam #11 just
below the park. The National Youth Administration, a program which provided work and
education for young people between the ages of 16 and 25, was engaged to construct the Log
Cabin project.
In a letter dated December 10, 1937,Wendelin Rettenberger, then Park Superintendent, is
pleading with the city of Dubuque for more resources since he has been informed by the WPA
field engineer that the majority of his workers will be removed from their work at Eagle Point
Park for the clearing of islands and bottoms on the Lock and Dam #11 project. This lengthy
document outlines the needs for the park at this stage of its development, which includes tools,
men, electricity and septic tanks for the Log Cabin complex. There was also a lack of stone,
quarrymen and masons."
" Letter fromPark Superintendent Rettenberger to Park Board, 1937.Folder G, City of Dubuque Park Commission
papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office,Dubuque,IA.
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The final large scale project directed by Rettenberger was the directed towards safety concerns
and the Bluffs Edge Promenade. In 1950, the bluff below the promenade was cleared and the
edge of the bluff was shored up with limestone retaining wall, the installation of chain link
fencing and the installation of coin operated mechanical viewers.
In terms of landscape changes during this period, a large collection of Black Maples were added
after Alfred Caldwell cleared the old Ravine Road `adjustments'. The maples were the
dominant species added in the late 1930s. `Nature aiding' was the main focus of these WPA and
NYA projects, with women playing a major role with raising and transplanting from the city's
nursery and greenhouses located along Lincoln Avenue.72
The buildings and landscape features created in the park during this era are clearly of national
significance. As noted in a survey of influential structures and places in Iowa by the Society of
Architectural Historians, the authors note the `Garden in the City' structures as a blend of both
Wright and Jensen in his approach to architecture and the land and have high praise for their
design. `Just as William Steele and Purcell and Elmslie's Woodbury County Courthouse in
Sioux City represents the high point of public architecture for the Prairie school, Caldwell's
work at Eagle Point Park is a near-perfect summation of"organic" landscape architecture'73
The list which follows outlines the extant buildings and features which contribute to the
national significance of the park's history during the WPA, the leadership and influence of
Alfred Caldwell. This includes seven buildings, recreational and landscaping features. As
previously noted,this period of significance runs continuously from the hiring of Alfred
Caldwell in 1934 to the retirement of Wendelin Rettenberger in 1952. The need to express the
continuity of place is imperative to protect the park's impressive collection of old trees. As
noted in a 1930s article the stands of trees and natural vegetation were historic as well. `Those
that know the lore of trees have told us that in Eagle Point park and elsewhere are trees that
have lived more than two centuries...74
' `Dubuque's Eagle Point-164 Acres of Beauty,' Telegraph Herald(1960): 1,34.
93 Gabrielle Esperdy and Karen Kingsley, eds. SAHArchipedia [Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2012].
David Gebhard and Gerald Mansheim, Buildings oflowa [New York: Oxford University Press, 1993] pp. 89-90.
74 "Many Trees in Dubuque Centuries Old, Some of Them are Older Than City," Telegraph Herald and Times
Journal, September 16, 1934,p. 3.
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Post World War II Optimism: The Baby Boom and Community Concerns 1953-1965
As noted in the later years of the previous period of significance,the functioning of the park
was changing with trends in Post-World War II America The economy was booming and so
was the population. The motivating force was returning GIs and efforts to provide them with
affordable housing. hi post WWII America, there was a shortage of nearly 2 million homes.
During the Depression and war years, young people were living with parents and extended
families were the norm. Through government programs such as the GI Bill, independent
housing in the form of FHA [Federal Housing Administration] approved Cape Cods and
Ranch style homes popped up in great numbers across the country. These were new
communities with planned neighborhoods which included parks, churches and schools.75
Another notable phenomenon was the transition from city to suburb. According to social
scientist and historian Kenneth Jackson, by 1960 forty percent of the population lived in
suburbs, nearly double the number as before the war. Those suburbs also changed in five
different ways. They were now: More remote from the city center, lower density, generic
design, more affordable, and lacking in diversity76
Dubuque did not vary much from the national norm. The city grew away from the downtown
area. There were planned neighborhood of`ticky tacky' houses 77, most notably the John Deere
subdivision off Hillcrest Avenue and adjacent to the newest city park, Flora. `The Committee on
Hygiene and Healthful Housing of the American Public Health Association (1948)published
Planning the Neighborhood, a book of standards that codified open space requirements in urban
areas and promoted local and neighborhood parks in proximate relationships with local
schools.78 But the majority of suburban development in Dubuque did not include direct and
immediate access to parks, which put pressure on existing parks like Eagle Point to provide
recreation for these growing families.
75 Ames,David L. `Interpreting the Post-World War II Suburban Landscapes as Historical Resources'
hit')"www
itn//wwwnns.eov/nr/nublications/bulletins/suburbs/Ames.ndf
76 Kenneth Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States. 1't ed. [Oxford and London:
Oxford University Press, 1987] p.90.
77 Lewis Mumford, The City in History:Its Origins,Its Transformations andlts Prospects[San Diego, CA,New
York and London: Harvest Press, 1961] p. 499-503.
78 Tridib Banerjee, `The future of public space: beyond invented streets and reinvented places' in Matthew Carmona and
Steven T iesdaell, eds. Urban Design Reader[Burlington MA: Architectural Press, 2007] pp.155-162 .
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Landscape historian Galen Cranz describes park development from 1930 to 1965 and the era of
the `Recreational Facility' — `recreation because of the emphasis on activity and `facility'
because it is essentially no longer a park in the sense of having a lot of green areas with a lot of
land around them.79 The park is now a place to go and do sports, games and other communal
activities such as birthday parties, wedding receptions and family reunions. The features added
to Eagle Point Park answer these needs—Open Air Pavilion for large gatherings, playgrounds
with equipment spotted throughout the park and the Band Shell for community theater and
musical entertainment. A newspaper article identifies the active community use of the Band
Shell. The Shell was designed for good acoustics with a huge sweeping roof and a high base
platform. It is here that the Eagle Point Players perform several one and two-act plays in the
summer under the apprenticeship of the recreation department. It is here too that nine concerts
were played this past season. The Dubuque Community Band offers six of these, Senior High,
Wahlert and Loras College each contribute one concert.80 Likewise in the 1960s, Richard
Kramer was the superintendent and noted that they planted 100 to 125 trees in Eagle Point every
year. This included ash, hackberry, sycamore and two or three varieties of maple.81
Archeology
A Phase IA archaeological investigation was conducted in 2013 by the University of Iowa's Office
of the State Archaeologist at Eagle Point Park, Site 13DB1 and adjacent sitel3DB363, Sections 7
and 18, T89N-R3E, Dubuque County, Iowa. A large amount of archival material relating to the sites
was reviewed and documented noting a potential to yield prehistoric and historic archeological
resources. The OSA report determined the need for a Remnant Mound Survey and a Phase 1
Archeological Survey to locate any prehistoric or historic cultural resources in the park landscape.
The City of Dubuque received a State of Iowa Certified Local Government Grant to conduct a Phase
I Intensive Survey and Evaluation of Eagle Point Park. The investigation was completed in distinct
steps, including LiDAR analysis, geophysical survey, cadaver dog survey, surface reconnaissance,
Oakfield Probe testing, and auger/shovel testing in the ridgetop areas previously identified as having
the highest potential for mound remnants. Maps were generated from the geophysical survey and
dog walkover, and hotspot areas were subjected to subsurface testing. Additional follow-up auger
testing was also completed across the ridge.
79 Galen Cranz, `Urban Parks of the Past and Future.' htto://www.nns.ore/reference/futurenarks
80 `Dubuque's Eagle Point-164 Acres of Beauty,' Telegraph Herald(1960) p.1.
81 `Dubuque's Eagle Point-164 Acres of Beauty,' Telegraph Herald(1960) p.34.
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In addition, a Phase I intensive archaeological survey was undertaken in a larger area along the
park's side slopes and a portion of low terrace areas to identify other archaeological sites within the
park proper. No traces of burial mounds were found in any of the tested areas during either the
pedestrian survey or subsurface testing of the ridgelines. Many of the tested areas were found to
contain intact, non-disturbed soil profiles.
Nine archaeological sites were newly recorded during this investigation and documented in the
Phase I Intensive Archaeological Survey of Eagle Point Park, City of Dubuque, Dubuque County,
Iowa, ReportNo. 847. Sites 13DB1100 and 13DB1101 are isolated prehistoric finds from the ground
surface with little research potential or significance. Sites 13DB1102, 13DB1103, and 13DB1104
are historic lead mining pits located on the bluff top and are considered contributing elements to the
nomination of Eagle Point Park for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. Other sites
contributing to this nomination include Site 13DB 1106, a historic dump; Site 13DB1108, a borrow;
and Site 13DB 1109,the remnants of a concrete stairway that at one time led from the bluff top to the
river below.
9. Major Bibliographical References
Bibliography (Cite the books, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form.)
Archival Materials
Caldwell, Alfred drawings and plans. Dubuque Museum of Art [DUMA], Dubuque, IA.
Caldwell, Alfred drawings, models and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division, Dubuque, IA.
City of Dubuque Park Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque, IA.
Heyne, G.A. drawings and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division, Dubuque, IA.
Lowrie, Charles Nassau Records. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY.
Lowrie, Charles Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,
Dubuque, IA.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 117
Rettenberger, Wendelin drawings and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division, Dubuque, IA.
Books
Beveridge, Charles. Frederick Law Olmsted: Designing the American Landscape
New York: Rizzoli, 2005.
Beveridge, Charles, ed., The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted Baltimore, MA and
London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 10 vols. to date, 1977—.
Blackmar, Elizabeth. The Park and the People: A story of Central Park. Ithaca NY: Cornell
University Press, 1992.
Blaser, Werner, ed.,Architecture and Nature: The Work ofAlfred Caldwell. Boston: Berkhaiiser
Verlag, 1984.
Burke, Edmund. Philosophical Enquiry into the Origins of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful.
London, 1756.
Carmona, Matthew and Tiesdaell, Steven, eds. Urban Design Reader. Burlington MA: Architectural
Press, 2007.
Domer, Dennis, ed. Alfred Caldwell, the Life and Work ofA Prairie School Landscape
Architect. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1997.
Downing, Andrew Jackson.A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape
Gardening... with Remarks on Rural Architecture, 4a'ed. New York: George P. Putnam,
1850.
Esperdy, Gabrielle and Kingsley, Karen, eds. SAHArchipedia. Charlottesville: University
of Virginia Press, 2012.
Gebhard, David and Mansheim, Gerald. Buildings oflowa. New York: Oxford University Press,
1993.
Gilpin, William. Three Essays on Picturesque Beauty... London, 1794.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 118
Grese, Robert E. Jens Jensen:Maker of Natural Parks and Gardens. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1992.
Harris, Diane. Second Suburb: Levittown Pennsylvania. Pittsburg, PA: University of Pittsburg
Press, 2010.
Howard, Sir Ebenezer. Garden Cities for To-Morrow. London, 1902. Jackson, Kenneth.
Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States. 1s' ed. Oxford and London:
Oxford University Press, 1987.
Loudon, John Claudius. The Suburban Gardener and Villa Companion. London, 1838.
Martin, Justin. Genius ofPlace: The Life of Frederick Law Olmsted. Cambridge, MA: DaCapo
Press, 2011.
McAlester, Virginia Savage.A Field Guide to American Houses, rev. ed. New York, NY:
Alfred P. Knopf, 1984 and 2013.
Miller, Wilhelm. The Prairie Spirit in Landscape Gardening. Amherst and Boston:
University of Massachusetts Press, 1915.
Mumford, Lewis. The City in History: Its Origins, Its Transformations and Its Prospects.
San Diego, CA, New York and London: Harvest Press, 1961.
Newton, Norman T. Design on the Land: The Development of Landscape Architecture.
Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1971.
Oldt, Franklin T. History of Dubuque County, Iowa; being a general survey of Dubuque County
history, including a history of the city of Dubuque and special account of districts throughout
the county,from the earliest settlement to the present time. Chicago: Goodspeed Historical
Association, c1911.
Olmsted, Frederick Law. Civilizing American Cities: Writings on City Landscapes. Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 1971.
Parsons, Kermit Carlyle. The Cornell Campus:A History oflts Planning and Development. Ithaca,
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 119
NY: Cornell University Press, 1968.
Price, Uvedale.An essay on the picturesque as Compared with the Sublime and the Beautiful...
London, 1810.
Powell, J.W. Twelfth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. Washington: Government
Printing Office, 1894.
Robinson, Charles Mulford.A Report for the Improvement of the City of Dubuque, Iowa. 1907.
Robinson, Charles Mulford. City Planning. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1916.
Robinson, Charles Mulford.Modern Civic Art, or the City Made Beautiful. New York: G.P.
Putnam's Sons, 1903.
Robinson, Charles Mulford. The Call of the City. San Francisco and New York: Paul Elder&
Company, 1909.
Robinson, Charles Mulford. The Improvement of Towns and Cities, or the Practical Basic of
Civic Aesthetics. New York: Putnam's Sons, 1901.
Johnson, Rossiter. A History of the World's Columbian Exposition Held in Chicago in 1893.
New York: D. Appleton and Company, 18.97.
Karson, Robyn S.A Genius for Place:American Landscapes of the Country Place Era.
Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 2007.
Nolen, John. Comprehensive City Plan for Dubuque, Iowa. 1936
Repton, Humphrey. Fragments on the Theory and Practice ofLandscape Gardening. London: T.
Bensley, 1816.
Turner, Joseph Mallord William Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast of England. London,
1826.
Twain, Mark.Life on the Mississippi. New York and London: Harpers Brothers
Publishing, 1903. First published in 1874.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 120
Williamson, Tom.Polite Landscapes: Gardens and Society in Eighteenth-Century
England. London and Baltimore, MA: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995.
Wilson, Richard Guy and Robinson, Sidney K., eds.Modern Architecture in America: Visions
and Revisions. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press, 1991.
Wilson, Richard Guy and Sidney K. Robinson. The Prairie School in Iowa. Ames, IA: Iowa
State University Press, 1977.
Wilson, William H. The City Beautiful Movement. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1989.
Articles —Including Newspaper and Magazine
`104 Dubuquers Work on NYA Project: Results Here are Described,' Telegraph Herald (January 29,
1939): 17.
`Aiding Nature at Eagle Point Park: Section of One of the Rock Ledges Which Will Be part
of Native Flower Garden,' Telegraph Herald(October 14, 1934).
Banerjee, Tridib, `The future of public space: beyond invented streets and reinvented places'
in Carmona, Matthew and Tiesdaell, Steven, eds. Urban Design Reader. Burlington MA:
Architectural Press, 2007.
Beurskens, Pete, `River Condo Bubble? Are condos on the river the new cabins up north?'
Big River Magazine (January-February 2007): 28-30.
Chandler, Curt. `Eagle Point History,' Telegraph Herald(May 21, 1978): 35.
`Dubuque's Eagle Point— 164 Acres of Beauty,' Telegraph Herald (1960): 1, 34.
`Eagle for Beautiful Park,' Telegraph Herald(April 24, 1912): 11.
`Eagle Point Park is Dedicated,' Telegraph Herald(June 17, 1910): 10.
`Eagle Point Park Plans,' Telegraph Herald(May 15, 1910): 16.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 121
`Eagle Point Park To Formally Open' Telegraph Herald(June 6, 1910): 4.
`First of Council Rings at Eagle Point Park,' Telegraph Herald(November 11, 1934).
`Frank Lloyd Wright to Give Lecture Here,' Telegraph Herald(November 18, 1934).
Fyten, David. `40 Years Take Their Toll on Eagle Point Pavilions,' Telegraph Herald(September
15, 1974): 25.
`Great Electrical Abuse; Park Shuts Off Juice,' Telegraph Herald(July 14, 1957): 4.
`Ham House Near Eagle Point Sold', Telegraph Herald(May 20, 1912): 7.
`Horticultural Garden Being Developed Here,' Telegraph Herald(November 4, 1934).
`Indian Council Rings of Stone for Dubuque Parks,' Telegraph Herald(August 26, 1934).
Jordan, Harriet. `Public Parks, 1885-1914,' Garden History 22.1 (1994): 85-113.
Lowrie, Charles Nassau. `American Society of Landscape Architects Minute On The Life
And Services Of Charles Mulford Robinson Associate Member,'Landscape Architecture,
INA (July 1919).
`Many Trees in Dubuque Centuries Old; Some of Them are Older Than City,' Telegraph Herald
and Times Journal(September 16, 1934): 3.
Naumann, Molly Myers and Jacobsen, James E. Dubuque-The Key City: The
Architectural and Historical Resources of Dubuque, Iowa 1837-1955. Phase II Historical
and Architectural Report(January 15, 2002).
`Nature Can't Be Copied, Is Theory of Superintendent of Parks; Develops Pools,' Telegraph
Herald(August 18, 1934): 5.
`New Eagle Point Picnic Shelter Opens Sunday,' Telegraph Herald(September 5, 1954).
Olmsted, Jr., Frederick Law. `The Town-Planning Movement hi America,' Housing and Town
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 122
Planning. TheAnnals, No. 51 (January 1914):172-181
`Panorama of Beauty is Seen from Southern Point of Towering Bluffs Above River,' Telegraph
Herald(September 2, 1934): 12.
`Park Board Prepares Development Plan,' Telegraph Herald(March 11, 1934).
`Park Rules are Given to the Public,' Telegraph Herald(May 10, 1910): 10.
Parks, Bryce. `Bryce's Version of World Events,' Dubuque 365ink(April 6-20, 2006): 4.
Piper, Andy. `Beauty on the Bluffs Holds Legacy,' Telegraph Herald(Sunday, July 26, 2009).
"`Poems in Stone" are Being Written at Eagle Point Park; Use Nature's Gifts' Telegraph Herald
(August 12, 1934
`Progress made on Park Pool Project,' Telegraph Herald(November 18, 1934).
`Reforestation Under Way at Eagle Point Park,' Telegraph Herald(October 7, 1934).
Robinson, Charles Mulford. `Fair as Spectacle,' in R. Johnson, ed.A History of the World's
Columbian Exposition, vol. 1, New York: D Appleton and Co. (1897): 493-512
`Rock Formations in Eagle Point Will Be Made Accessible to Dubuqueland Visitor,' Telegraph
Herald(September 9, 1934): 12.
`Shiras Memorial Dedicated Sunday', Telegraph Herald(May 30, 1921): 10.
Sniderman Bachrach, Julia `National Historic Landmark Nomination—Lincoln Park Lily Pond',
December 2004.
Stankard, Mark. `Retaining Nature: Alfred Caldwell's "City in a Garden" At Eagle Point Park.'
Iowa Architect, No. 96: 218 (Fall 1996): 18-21.
`Start Another Unit in Park Program,' Telegraph Herald(November 25, 1934): 7.
`Start Move to End Streetcar Service Here,' Telegraph Herald(May 12, 1931): 1.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 123
Stein, Sally. `Figures of the Future: Photography of the National Youth Administration,' in
Daniel, Forresta, Stange and Stein's Official Images: New Deal Photography. Washington,
DC: Smithsonian Institute Press, 1987.
Szeszycki, Emily, `Local Bridge, Park Shelters Honored for Architecture,' Telegraph Herald
(October 16, 2004): 3.
Thompson, Dave. `Park Board Cool to Log Cabin Plan,' Telegraph Herald(March 11, 1963): 32.
Wilson Richard Guy. `An Artist and a Poet: Alfred Caldwell Illuminates Nature's Ways,'
Landscape Architecture (September 1977): 412.
"Young Artist Scores at Eagle Point Park," Telegraph Herald(June 7, 1936): 17.
Internet Sources
Ames, David L. `Interpreting the Post-World War II Suburban Landscapes as Historical
Resources.' National Park Service.
http://www.nps.gov/nr/publications/bulletins/suburbs/Ames.pd
Bero Architecture PLLC. `Cornell University Long Term Means Restriction Project Historic
Resources Report', May 31, 2011.
https://meansrestrictionstudv.fs.comell.edu/vdf/Long Term Means
Restriction Project Application 31May2011/01 Section 1 Overview
/03-Historic Resources Report.pdf
Chicago Architects Oral History Project, Department of Architecture,the Art Institute of
Chicago, c1987. Oral history of Alfred Caldwell interviewed by Betty J. Blum, pp.46-47.
http://www.artic.edu/aic/libraries/caohp/
City of Dubuque. `Eagle Point Park: Pavilions.'
http://www.cityofdubugue.org/453/Eagle-Point-Park
Project for Public Spaces. Galen Cranz, `Urban Parks of the Past and Future.'
http://www.pps.org/reference/futureparks/
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 124
Lyon, Randolph W. The Encyclopedia of Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank,
1991. www.encvclopediadubuque.org
The Cultural Landscape Foundation. Denis Domer, `Biography of Alfred Caldwell,' July 20,
2009. http://tclf.org/yioneer/alfred- caldwell/bioarayhy-alfred-caldwell
The Cultural Landscape Foundation. `Charles Mulford Robinson (1869-1917).'
http://tclf.org/vioneer/charles-mulford-robinson
The Cultural Landscape Foundation. `Charles Nassau Lowrie (1869-1939)', December 11, 2009.
httys://tclf.org/yioneer/research- query/charles-nassau-Lowrie
State Historical Society of Iowa `Oliver Perry Shiras.' The Annals oflowa, vol. 13 1921),
74-74. httv:Hir.uiowa.edu/annals-of-iowa/voll3/issl/28
Chicago Historical Society. `The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago,'2005.
http://www.ecycloyedia.chicagohistory.org/
United States Forest Service. `Recreational Activities.' July 17, 2014.
www.fs.fed.us/recreation/vrouams
American Studies at the University of Virginia. City Beautiful: The 1901 Plan for Washington,
DC.' November 8, 1997. http://xroads.virginia.edu/—cap/citvbeautiful/citv.html
Reports
Finn, N. G., Finn, M.R., Morrow, T.A. (2015). Phase I Intensive Archaeological Survey of
Eagle Point Park, City of Dubuque, Dubuque County, Iowa, Wapsi Valley Archaeology
Report No. 847.
NPS Fort,10-900a OMB Approval No.
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Previous documentation on file(NPS):
preliminary determination of individual listing(36 CFR 67) has been requested
previously listed in the National Register
previously determined eligible by the National Register
designated a National Historic Landmark
recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey #
recorded by Historic American Engineering Record #
recorded by Historic American Landscape Survey#
Primary location of additional data:
X State Historic Preservation Office
Other State agency
_Federal agency
_Local government
University
_Other
Name of repository
Historic Resources Survey Number(if assigned):
10. Geographical Data
Acreage of Property 164
Use either the UTM system or latitude/longitude coordinates
Latitude-Longitude References
Datum (indicated on USGS map): NAD 1983
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1
70 69
s7 62 ,
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60 59 45
55
Poll Degree L•t.N. Degree Long.W. Point Degree La.N. Degree Lone.W. 4
1 90.6616974 42.5494DO3 36 90.6501007 42.5321007 53 pp
2 90.6560974 42.5466DO3 37 90.6505966 .42. 5318985 •d�52 J7
3 90 .6546021 ,42.5456009 38 90.651001 42.5327988 47 L4 0
51
4 90.6527023 42.5444984 39 90.6517029 42.5326004 *.V50
5 90.6523972 42.5443DD1 40 90.6518021 42.5329018 4344 10
6 90651001 425433998 41 90.6524963 42 5363998
7 90.6499023 42.5424DO4 42 90.6518021 42.5367012
8 90.6500015 42.5423012 43 90.6519012 42.540699
9 90.6489029 42.5414009 44 90.6517029 42.540699
10 90.6481018 42.540699 45 90.6518021 42.5415001 11
11 906461029 4)83%5017 4690 55)0996 4)_541599{
12 90.G45301B 425371017 47 90.652298 42.5418015
13 90.645401 42.5368996 48 90.6511002 42.542099
19 90.6455002 42.5365982 49 90.6509018 42.5419998 3
15 90.6455002 42.5363DO7 50 90.6507034 42.5418015 4 6
16 90.6455994 42.5363DO7 51 90.6504974 42.5418015 15
17 90.6461029 142.5363007 52 90.6508026 42.542099 212223
18 90.6461029 42.5362D15 53 90. 6513977 42.5424995 2
19 90.6464996 42.5362015 54 90.6519012 42.5432014 1[129
20 90.6472015 42.5359993 55 90.6527023 42.5438004 2r,1y-32
21 90.6475983 42.5353012 56 90.6S36026 42.5443993
22 90.64759B3 42.5351932 57 90.6537018 42.5443993 35
5&34
23 906471024 425351982 58 906539001 425444984
24 90.fi471024 142.5348DI5 59 90.6540985 42.5444984
_
25 90.6474991 42.5349007 60 90.6548004 42.5444984
26 90.6473999 42.5346935 61 90.6573029 42.5461998
27 90.6473007 42.5345DO1 63 90.6576996 42.5463982
28 911 f4/31](1/ 14)6{45001 63 4065%711{1 4)_546MIOi
29 90.6471024 1425344DO9 64 90.6583023 42.5466003
30 90.6471024 42.5343018 65 90.6584015 42.5466003
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31 90.646696 42.5343-18 66 90.6585007 42.5466003
32 90.646696 42.5340D 9
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33 90.6474991 42.534000O4 68 90.6585999 42.54fi 5012
34 90.6474991 42.5334015 69 90.6595001 42.5470009
35 90.6481018 42.5334D15 70 90.6616974 42.5470009
Reference Map. Source: City of Dubuque 2017
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No.
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National Park Service
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Section number Additional Items Page 127
WIF
Mississippi
Boundary Map. Source: City of Dubuque 2015
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
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Verbal Boundary Description (Describe the boundaries of the property.)
Eagle Point Park's northern and northeastern boundaries are formed by the natural steep bluff
which skirts the edge of the Mississippi River and abuts the Canadian Pacific Railroad tracks.
The southern eastern boundary of the park has a curved formation which comprises the
former stone quarry which sat below the bluff, but continues to follow the edge of the bluff
along its southern border which abuts Lincoln Avenue and runs along the property line for the
Mathias Ham House site. In the southwestern section of the park, the boundary is adjacent to
Shiras Avenue until just north of the Southern Gate Road. This part of the western boundary
is formed by abutting private property lines and its accompanying woodlands, which then
narrows to the northwestern section of the park, in which Eagle Point Drive forms the western
boundary. hi the far western section of the park is bounded by private property and covered
with native woods.
Boundary Justification (Explain why the boundaries were selected.)
These boundaries were chosen as they are the historical boundaries of the park. These
historical boundaries include undeveloped land and forest especially in the northern and
northwestern sectors which were included in order to preserve the land from urban
development.
11. Form Prepared By
Name/Title: Dr. Julie Schlarman
Organization: Jackson Street Consulting
Street& Number: 1331 Jackson Street
City or Town: Dubuque State: IA Zip Code: 52001
E-mail: jischlarmanAgmail.com
Telephone: 563.495.1234 Date:
Name/Title: Planning Services Department
Organization: City of Dubuque. Iowa
Street& Number: 50 W. 131' Street
City or Town: Dubuque State: IA Zip Code: 52001
E-mail: lcarsten ,cityordubugue.org
Telephone: 563-589-4210 Date:
NPS Form 10 900 a OMB Approval No.
10210018
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National Park Service
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Property Owner:
Name/Tide: Citv of Dubuque,. Iowa
Organization: City of Dubuque, Iowa
Street&Number: 50 W. 13' Street
City or Town: Dubuque State: IA Zip Code: 52001
E-mail: lcarsten(cbcityofdubuclue.org
Telephone: 563-589-4210 Date:
Additional Documentation
❑ Maps: A USGS map or equivalent(7.5 or 15 minute series).
Subject District
s
USGS map. Source: City of Dubuque Planting Department 2015.
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No.
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❑ Resource Key
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Source: City of Dubuque Planning Department 2016
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Table of Contributing and Non-contributing Features
Map# Name C/NC Date Type
1. EAGLE POINT PARK C 1908 Site
CIRCULATION PATTERNS
2. Pedestrian Path C Structure
3. Vehicular Path C Structure
A. ENTRANCE FEATURES
4. Entrance Kiosk NC c. 1995 Building
5. Eagle Statue on Limestone Pedestal C c. 1950 Object
6. Curved Concrete Retaining Wall C c. 1925 Structure
B. WESTERN PARK FEATURES
7. Horseshoe Pits (6) C c. 1920 Object
8. Public Restrooms C c. 1940 Building
9. Wading Pool C c. 1920 Structure
10. Band Shell C 1958 Building
11. Oen Air Pavilion C 1955 Building
C. "CITY IN A GARDEN" FEATURES
12. Terrace Room C 1937 Building
13. Veranda Rooms C 1936 Building
14. Indian Room with Public Restrooms C 1934 Building
15. Bridge Complex C 1935 Building
16. Tennis Courts (6) C c. 1938 Structure
17. Circular Stone Planters in North Parkin Lot(3) C c. 1938 Object
D. LEDGE GARDEN FEATURES
18. Ledge Garden C 1935 Site
19. Stand Alone Council Rings (4) C 1935 Object
E. EASTERN PARK FEATURES
20. Riverfront Pavilion C 1910 Building
21. Public Restrooms near Concession Stand C c. 1940 Building
22. Concession Stand/Utility Building C c. 1940 Building
23. Shiras Memorial Pavilion C 1920 Building
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24. Southeastern Ci /River Viewing Point C 1909 Site
25. Triangular Concrete Patio at Allison Point C 1909 Site
26. Hexagon Concrete Patio at Shiras Point C 1909 Site
27. Eagle's View Pavilion NC c. 1970 Building
28. Public Restrooms near Parking Lot NC c. 1990 Structure
F. SOUTHERN PARK FEATURES
29. Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Building
30. Council Rings near Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Object
31. Public Restrooms near Log Cabin Pavilion C 1937-1939 Building
32. Tri-State View Pavilion C 1959 Building
33. Water Tower NC 1940 Structure
G. NORTHERN PARK FEATURES
34. Scenic Overlook on Eagle Point Drive C 1909 Site
Index of Figures
1 Map of Buildings.
2 Map of Landscape Features.
3 Perspective drawing of Riverfront Pavilion by John Spencer, 1910. City of Dubuque Park
Commission papers. City of Dubuque Planning Office, Dubuque, IA.
4 Postcard of`Shiras Memorial Shelter, Eagle Point Park, Dubuque.' c1940. The
Encyclopedia of Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991.
www.encvclopediadubuque.org
5 General plan of`City in a Garden.' Alfred Caldwell's `City in a Garden' plan. DUMA
A5, 1934. Dubuque Museum of Art.
6 Partial plan illustrating the eastern range of the Bridge Complex. Alfred Caldwell's
`City in a Garden' plan. DUMA E22,1934. Dubuque Museum of Art.
7 Elevation of the eastern range of the Bridge Complex and its supporting
superstructure. Alfred Caldwell's `City in a Garden' plan. DUMA E23,1934.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
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Dubuque Museum of Art.
8 Detail of the western end of the Bridge Complex, showing the deterioration of the
balcony and its missing lighting fixtures. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 14
September 2015.
9 Detail of the complex fireplace on the western fagade of the Log Cabin pavilion.
Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 23 September 2014.
10 Interior of the Open Air pavilion looking south. Photograph by Dr Julie
Schlarman, 14 September 2015.
11 Tri State View Pavilion looking east over the Mississippi River. Photograph by Dr. Julie
Schlarman, 17 October 2015.
12 Eagle's View Pavilion looking south. Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman, 14 September 2015
13 Entrance Kiosk facing northeast. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 23 September 2014.
14 Band Shell camera facing south. Photograph by David Cobb Craig, 2010.
http://davidcobbcraig.blogspot.com/2010 11 01 archive.html
15 Water Tower, camera facing north with turkey vultures sunning themselves on a cool
autumn morning. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 17 October 2015.
16 Accessible restrooms located between Eagle's View and the Riverfront Pavilions,
camera facing south. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 1 October 2015.
17 Scenic overlook of the Mississippi River from Eagle Point Drive; camera facing
northeast. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 27 June 2015.
18 Tree-lined Kramer Circle Drive with public restrooms on far right; camera facing south.
Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 17 October 2015.
19 Eagle statue with plantings in foreground, Streetcar Stand and former dual staircases;
camera facing southeast. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 1 October 2015.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
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20 Photograph of remnants of the staircase south of streetcar stand and portions of the
concrete retaining wall. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 17 October 2015.
21 Photograph of remnants of staircase [north of streetcar stand]; camera facing south.
Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman, 27 June 2015.
22 Bluff's Edge Promenade from Shiras Memorial; part of Lock and Dam #11 on lower
right; camera facing north. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 14 September 2015.
23 The Meadow from Open Air Pavilion with the Band Shell in the background; camera
facing east. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 14 June 2015.
24 The water fountain, limestone viewing bench and parking lot edging with tennis courts in
background; camera facing northwest. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 21 June 2015.
26 Stone planter in parking lot adjacent to tennis courts. Photograph by Dr Julie
Schlarman 27 June 2015.
27 Wood and plaster model of Bridge Complex —upper left, Indian Room and restrooms
—lower right, patio, and Veranda Rooms on the far right as built. No date for model.
Caldwell, Alfred drawings, models and plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,
Dubuque, IA.
28 Water bubbler, steps and semicircular stone patio in background; camera facing
south. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 14 September 2015.
29 Ledge garden, camera facing south. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 21 September 2015.
30 Postcard of`Pool and Rock Garden, Eagle Point Park', c1950. Collection of Dr Julie
Schlarman.
31 Photograph of the eastern council ring, Dubuque Telegraph Herald. `First of Council
Rings at Eagle Point Park,' Telegraph Herald(November 11, 1934).
32 Photograph of council ring, public restrooms and part of the parking lot adjacent to the
Log Cabin Pavilion. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 14 September 2015.
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 135
33 Ham [Hamm] Island can be identified in the upper right quadrant of the map to the right
of Lake Peosta. Andreas, A. T.Andreas'illustrated historical atlas of the State oflowa
Chicago, Andreas Atlas Co. 1875, p.111.
34 Southern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and Robinson. Lowrie,
Charles Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,
Dubuque, IA.
35 Northern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and Robinson. Lowrie,
Charles Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford plans. City of Dubuque Parks Division,
Dubuque, IA.
36 Detail of the southern portion of the 1909 plan of Eagle Point Park by Lowrie and
Robinson. Lowrie, Charles Nassau and Robinson, Charles Mulford plans. City of
Dubuque Parks Division, Dubuque, IA.
37 `Cathedral of Elms' on Rhomberg Avenue,first half of the twentieth century. The
Encyclopedia of Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991.
www.encvclopediadubuque.org
38 Early twentieth century postcard of`Entrance to Eagle Point Park Dubuque.'
c1915. The Encyclopedia of Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991.
www.encvclopediadubuque.org
39 Early twentieth century postcard of`Eagle Point Drive.'Collection of Dr Julie Schlarman.
40 Postcard of Shiras Memorial Shelter on Eagle Point and demolished Wisconsin High
Bridge, c1965. Collection of Dr Julie Schlarman.
41 Quarry and plant of eagle Point Lime Co. Eagle Point, Dubuque County Iowa.
From Iowa Geological Survey, Vol. XVII, Fifteenth Annual Report of the Iowa State
Geologist, Plate XXXIII, 1906.
42 Bluffs Edge Promenade from Riverfront Pavilion; camera facing east. Photograph by Dr
Julie Schlarman 27 June 2015.
43 Postcard of`Belvidere at Eagle Point Park, Dubuque IA', c 1940. The Encyclopedia of
4Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991. www.encvclovediadubuque.org
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 136
44 Site of former `Belvidere;' Bluffs Edge Promenade with mechanical viewer; camera
facing east. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 9 October 2015.
45 `Riverside Stairway Leading to Eagle Point Park, Dubuque' n.d. The Encyclopedia of
Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991. www.encvclopediadubuque.org
46 Detail of`Shiras Memorial Shelter' plan and elevation. Photograph by Dr Julie Schlarman 1
October 2015.
47 Postcard of`Old Log Cabin' shelter at Eagle Point Park, c.1950. The Encyclopedia of
Dubuque. Dubuque, IA: First National Bank, 1991. www.encvclopediadubuque.org
48 Jens Jensen's waterfall and prairie stream at Columbus Park, Chicago 1910. Chicago
Historical Society. `The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago,'2005.
http://www.encvclopedia.chicagohistory.org/
49 Caldwell plan of 1935. DUMA A3, 1934. Dubuque Museum of Art.
50 Landscaping around the Veranda Rooms, c1936-1940. Camera facing northwest.
Photograph by Dr. Julie Schlarman, 14 September 2014.
51 Detail of Caldwell's `City in a Garden' plan showing the Bridge Complex on the far left.
DUMA A5, 1934. Dubuque Museum of Art.
52 Alfred Caldwell [far left] inspecting stones for the floor of the lily pond, c 1935.
`Proress made on Park Pool Project,' Telegraph Herald(November 18, 1934).
53 Postcard of Lombardy pines on Eagle Point Drive, c.1920. Collection of Dr Julie
Schlarman.
54 National Youth Administration Log Cabin project. Council ring, public restrooms,
playground with Log Cabin Pavilion barely visible in center back. Photograph by Dr
Julie Schlarman 14 September 2015.
Photographs
Submit clear and descriptive photographs. The size of each image must be 1600x1200 pixels
NPS Form 10 900 a OMB Approval No.
10210018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 137
(minimum), 3000x2000 preferred, at 300 ppi (pixels per inch) or larger. Key all photographs
to the sketch map. Each photograph must be numbered and that number must correspond to
the photograph number on the photo log.
❑ Photo Log/Sketch Map
Sig
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t
ddd w�
Sketch map. Source: City of Dubuque Planning Department 2016
NPS Fort,10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 138
The following information specific to the phot log:
Property Name Eagle Point Park
County and State Dubuque County,Iowa
Name of Photographer Ose Akinlotan
Location of original negative or digital files CD
If digital,type of digital ink and paper used HP Vivera ink and HP premium paper
Photo# Name Description
ENTRANCE FEATURES
1. Entrance Kiosk View North
2. Eagle Statue on Limestone Pedestal View Northeast
3. Curved Concrete Retaining Wall View Northeast
WESTERN PARK FEATURES
4. Horseshoe Pits (6) View Southwest
5. Public Restrooms View East
6. Wading Pool View Southeast
7. Band Shell View Southwest
8. Oen Air Pavilion View Northeast
"CITY IN A GARDEN" FEATURES
9. Terrace Room View Southwest
10. Veranda Rooms View West
11. Indian Room with Public Restrooms View East
12. Indian Room with Public Restrooms View Northwest
13. Bride Complex View Southeast
14. Bride Complex View West
15. Tennis Courts (6) View Northwest
16. Circular Stone Planters in North Parkin Lot(3) View Southeast
LEDGE GARDEN FEATURES
17. Ledge Garden View Northwest
18. Stand Alone Council Rings (4) View South
EASTERN PARK FEATURES
19. Riverfront Pavilion View Northwest
NPS Form 10-900a OMB Approval No.
1024-0018
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Section number Additional Items Page 139
20. Public Restrooms near Concession Stand View West
21. Concession Stand/Utility Building View Northeast
22. Shiras Memorial Pavilion View East
23. Southeastern City/River Viewing Point View Southeast
24. Triangular Concrete Patio at Allison Point View Northeast
25. Hexagon Concrete Patio at Shiras Point View East
26. Eagle's View Pavilion View Southwest
27. Public Restrooms near Parking Lot View Southeast
SOUTHERN PARK FEATURES
28. Log Cabin Pavilion View Southwest
29. Council Rings near Log Cabin Pavilion View Southwest
30. Public Restrooms near Log Cabin Pavilion View Southeast
31. Tri-State View Pavilion View Northeast
32. Water Tower View Northwest
NORTHERN PARK FEATURES
33. Scenic Overlook on Eagle Point Drive View North
CIRCULATION PATTERNS
34. Pedestrian Path View Northwest
35. Pedestrian Path View Southeast
36. Vehicular Path View Northeast
Acknowledgements
This nomination has been financed in part with Federal funds from the National Park Service, U.S.
Department of the Interior. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or
policies of the Department of the Interior,nor does the mention of trade names or commercial products
constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior.
This program receives Federal financial assistance for identification and protection of historic
properties. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, and the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended,the U.S. Department of the Interior
prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color,national origin, disability or age in its federally
assisted programs. If you believe you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or
facility as described above of if you desire further information,please write to: Office of Equal
Opportunity,National Park Service, 1849 C Street,N.W., Washington, D.C. 20204.