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Highland Park

Highland Park, also known as Highland Botanical Park, is an arboretum located in Rochester, New York, United States. The park’s administrative headquarters is on 171 Reservoir Avenue in Rochester. It is among many in Rochester initially developed in the work of Frederick Law Olmsted, including Genesee Valley Park, Maplewood Park, and Seneca Park, now a Zoo.

In 1888, two nurserymen, George Ellwanger and Patrick Barry gave the Rochester, NYC neighborhood 20 acres (8.1 ha) of land. The result was Highland Park, one of the first public arboretums in the United States. Highland Park is one of the numerous parks created to be designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and was created to preserve its natural beauty. The horticulturist John Dunbar, later known by the local community as Johnny Lilacseed, started Highland Park’s famous lilac collection in 1892. Many of the varieties he planted were the descendants of indigenous Balkan Mountain flowers brought to North America by early colonists.

The park is located on a glacial moraine and shares this hill reservoir of water with Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School. Highland Park covers 150 acres (61 ha) and has more than 1200 lilac trees, which include more than 500 species. The other woody plants are Japanese magnolias that smell sweet, maples, and other tree species, as well as a variety of plants like azaleas and barberries, the mountain laurel, along with 700 kinds of rhododendron and a rock garden that includes evergreens that are dwarf. The gardens also have herbaceous plants, such as flowers, bulbs for spring, and a bed of pansies with 10,000 plants designed as an oval flowering “carpet” with a pattern that changes with the seasons.

Highland Park has a natural amphitheater, a sunken garden, a Gothic-style tower (known as “Warner Castle”), and a greenhouse for the Lamberton Conservatory. An effigy depicting Frederick Douglass overlooks the arena. The amphitheater outdoors (Highland Park Bowl) is utilized for summertime performances, Shakespeare in the Park, and The Free Movies in the Parks series. The park comprises various memorabilia-themed gardens, including The Greater Rochester Vietnam Veterans Memorial, The AIDS Remembrance Garden, and The Poet’s Garden in Highland Park South.

The Goethe Monument

On the 17th of September 50, 1950, a memorial was built at Highland Park to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. A committee headed by Ewald P. The Appelt committee raised the necessary funds. Regional artist and head of the Sculpture Department at the University of Rochester, William Ehrich (1897-1960), was selected to design the monument. Explaining it in the following manner: “For the portrayal of Goethe’s personality, I considered no particular phase of his life. His spiritual aristocracy appears to be the point requiring stress, culminating in his immortal appearance around the age of sixty-five.” A1 Bed Bug Exterminator Rochester

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