Jensen
is now considered dean of the Prairie style of landscape
architecture, leader of the Midwestern conservation
movement, and is remembered as a significant Chicago
social reformer
See also "Chicago
Renaissance," a guest essay saluting Jensen's
book, Siftings
"The primitive prairies of Illinois have not
been entirely destroyed. Here and there has been left
something of the primitive that the plow has not turned
under. It seems a pity, rather a stupidity, that some
section of this marvelous landscape has not been set aside
for future generations to study and to love a sea
of flowers in all colors of the rainbow."
Jens Jensen
As
Chicago underwent rapid development during the late nineteeth
century, many people felt proud of the changes the city
was experiencing. Tall buildings, the elevated railway system,
improved roads, and a new drainage system all signified
that Chicago was becoming one of the nations premier
cities.
Photo
of Jens Jensen courtesy of Chicago Park District,
Special Collections.
Within
this context, however, a Danish immigrant, Jens Jensen (1860-1951),
saw the quickly disappearing native landscape as a resource
to be revered, idealized, and preserved. Jensen is now considered
dean of the Prairie style of landscape architecture, leader
of the Midwestern conservation movement, and is remembered
as a significant Chicago social reformer. Today, the City
of Chicago's Department of Cultural Affairs and Chicago
Park District have formed the Jens Jensen Legacy Project
to inspire current generations about this influential designer
and conservationist.
From
Laborer to Superintendent
Born
into a prosperous family in Slesvig, Denmark, Jens Jensen
emigrated to the United States in 1884 with his fiancee,
Anne Marie Hansen. After brief periods in Florida and Iowa,
the young couple settled in Chicago where Jensen found employment
as a laborer for the West Park Commission.
Soon
promoted to foreman, Jensen planted a formal garden of exotic
flowers. When the garden did not thrive, he took a team
and wagon into the countryside and gathered an array of
wildflowers, many of which were then considered weeds. Jensen
transplanted the wildflowers into a small corner of Union
Park, creating the American Garden in 1888. Although few
park visitors had ever seen a wildflower garden before,
the American Garden became quite popular.
Working
his way through the park system, Jensen was appointed superintendent
of the 200-acre Humboldt Park in 1895. By the late 1890s,
the West Park Commission was entrenched in corruption. After
refusing to participate in political graft, Jensen was ousted
by a dishonest park board in 1900.
Chiwaukee
Prairie in southeastern Wisconsin, the kind of spectacular
flower display Jensen feared would be lost if not protected
for the future. Photo by Joe Kayne.
Special
Park Commission
Despite
personal financial struggles, the turn of the twentieth
century proved to be an exciting time for Jensen. He was
commissioned to design several estates on Chicagos
north shore and in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. He also made
many excursions into the unspoiled countryside where he
studied and photographed natural scenes and flora.
During
this period, Jensen became involved in several organizations
devoted to improving the city and conserving natural areas.
He was an active member of the Municipal Science Club, a
group that in 1898 sponsored a presentation by Jacob Riis,
an influential photojournalist and social reformer from
New York. Riiss speech inspired the Chicago City Councils
formation of a Special Park Commission the following year.
This committee was composed of prominent businessmen, attorneys,
design professionals, and social reformers appointed by
the mayor as well as representatives of the South, West,
and Lincoln Park Commissions. Jensen was appointed to the
Special Park Commission in 1903 or 1904.
Birth
of the Forest Preserve District
The
Special Park Commission sought to study Chicagos existing
open spaces, create playgrounds in the citys most
densely populated neighborhoods, and develop a systematic
plan for parks and recreational areas throughout the metropolitan
area. Over a one-year period, Jensen and his friend and
colleague, the Prairie School architect Dwight Perkins,
conducted an exhaustive study. Their influential report
not only recommended a whole series of new parks and playgrounds
in the inner city, but also the protection of thousands
of acres of land.
In
1903, Jensen created a map entitled "Proposed System
of Forest Parks and Country Pleasure Roads." He incorporated
this concept into the Special Park Commissions report,
published the following year. The report identified significant
natural areas in the Des Plaines River Valley, along the
banks of the Little Calumet River, and within the Skokie
Marsh region along the north shore of Lake Michigan. Jensen
and Perkins recommended the creation of a belt of natural
lands at the perimeter of Chicago. They suggested a new
system of boulevards that would link the nature reserves
with the citys existing park and boulevard system.
Henry
G. Foreman, president of the Cook County Board, wanted to
quickly move forward to begin acquiring nature preserve
lands. He formed an Outer Belt Park Commission in 1903.
Two years later, as costs of land were increasing, the Commission
decided to immediately draft a bill to allow Cook County
to begin buying property. Jensen and Perkins were disappointed
that the new Outer Belt Park Commission was not working
to achieve their broad vision for the forest preserves.
They enlisted the support of Chicagos renowned architect
and planner, Daniel H. Burnham, who incorporated their ideas
into his seminal 1909 Plan of Chicago. After several more
years of political debate on this subject, the Forest Preserve
District of Cook County was finally established in 1915.
Within its first 10 years, the new agency had accumulated
24,000 acres of land.
Reform
and Opportunity in the West Park System
While
Jensen was advocating the creation of the forest preserves,
a new era of reform had begun in the West Park System. In
1905, a new governor, Charles S. Deneen, dismissed the West
Park Board of Commissioners and appointed a progressive
and honest board. The newly appointed board president, Bernard
A. Eckhart, selected Jensen as chief landscape architect
and general superintendent of the entire West Park System.
When
Jensen returned to the West Park Commission, he found the
parks in terrible condition. Deteriorating areas and features
in Humboldt, Garfield, and Douglas Parks allowed him to
experiment with his evolving naturalistic style. Jensen
demolished the small Victorian conservatories in the three
parks that had each existed for less than 20 years, but
had all suffered terrible deterioration. He replaced them
with a larger, centrally located Garfield Park Conservatory.
Designed in conjunction with Hitchings & Co., a New
York engineering company that specialized in greenhouses,
the new Garfield Park Conservatory was considered revolutionary
when it opened in 1908.
Jensen
thought that most conservatories looked like palaces or
chateaus and were too fanciful and pretentious. In contrast
his new structure emulated the simple form of a haystack.
Many other conservatories displayed plants in pots placed
on pedestals or in large groupings in the center of a room.
Within the Garfield Park Conserva-tory, however, Jensen
designed interior rooms to look like outdoor landscapes.
Jensen placed plants directly in the ground and framed views
by keeping the center of each room open, with a fountain
or a naturalistic pond as the centerpiece. He also hid exposed
pipes and mechanical systems by tucking them behind beautiful
walls of stratified stonework. Unlike the mounds of volcanic
stone used in Victorian conservatories, Jensens horizontal
stonework resembled the bluffs and outcroppings found along
rivers in the Midwest.
Unfinished
areas within all three parks also gave Jensen the opportunity
to create impressive gardens and naturalistic landscapes.
In Humboldt Park, he extended the existing lagoon into a
long meandering waterway. Inspired by the natural scenery
he saw during trips to wetland landscapes in Illinois and
Wisconsin, Jensen designed hidden water sources that supplied
two rocky brooks. He edged this "prairie river"
with native grasses and established emergent plants in the
water such as arrowroot, lotus, and cattails. Nearby, Jensen
created a circular garden of roses, other perennials, trellis-like
pergolas, sculptures, and ceramic urns. Between the rose
garden and the prairie river, he created a naturalistic
perennial garden with masses of native flowers.
City
residents relaxing by Jensen's prairie river in Humboldt
Park, circa 1910.Photo courtesy Chicago Park District,
Special Collections.
"For
Jensen, the only meaningful source of inspiration for landscape
gardening was the native landscape," writes Robert
E. Grese in his biography, Jens
Jensen, Maker of Natural Parks & Gardens (1998).
"Its vegetation, its wild life are due to natural selection
for fitness for thousands of years. It is fitting and it
belongs. To destroy it is to destroy the real America. To
corrupt it is the work of stupidity it is vandalism."
Progressive
Programs and Plans
In
addition to redesigning existing parks, Jensen also created
new small parks to provide breathing spaces in densely populated
immigrant neighborhoods. Although expansive elements such
as broad meadows or meandering waterways could not be included
in the compact sites, Jensen introduced his naturalistic
philosophies in several ways. He used native plants in informal
groupings and sun-openings as gathering and play spaces.
Jensen incorporated his characteristic stonework into several
of the small park designs, and also included Prairie-style
architectural elements. In several of these small parks,
Jensen introduced community gardens to bring urban dwellers
closer to nature. Tended by neighborhood children, these
gardens yielded produce for their families as well as for
orphanages and other charities.
Jensen
also embraced a connection between the performing arts and
nature. In many of his small park designs, he included a
"players green." This was a slightly elevated
sun-opening, which served as the stage for outdoor theatrical
performances. The audience would sit on the ground on an
adjacent meadow area. Jensen was interested in using masques
and other outdoor theatrical productions to educate people
about nature and conservation.
He also believed in celebrating nature, and he inspired
events fitting this theme. In 1915, a Garfield Park festival
featured 1,400 children who celebrated natures four
seasons before an audience of 25,000.
Many
of Jensens progressive ideas about nature in the city
were articulated in an ambitious open space study he conducted
in 1917. His report, "A Plan for a Greater West Park
System," called for thousands of acres of new parks,
boulevards, greenways, and community gardens. To Jensens
great disappointment, the plan was not implemented. However,
many of his ideas impressed a large number of friends and
supporters.
Jensen
argued for planning that aspires to "harmony with the
laws of nature." As he noted, an "artificial"
type of plan, while it permits a man to arrive at his business
in so much shorter time and allows him to run from one thing
to another with less expenditure of effort and money, [it]
makes not provision for the cultivation of his soul. A little
inconvenience for the sake of a better environment is well
worth the cost. To shut out nature from mans whole
life is to shut out the inspiration of noble and humanitarian
things. The artificial state has come to be the producer
of insanity, crime, and immorality."
Organizations
and Conservation Efforts
Jensen
explored many of his ideas about bringing people closer
to nature through his involvement with several clubs and
organizations. In 1908, Jensen began a series of "Saturday
Afternoon Walking Trips," along with other members
of the Playground Association. These outings to natural
areas outside of Chicago often attracted 100 to 200 walkers,
and Jensen took turns leading the group. These walks became
so popular that they inspired the formation of the "Prairie
Club," a name suggested by Jensen.
The
Prairie Club sponsored walking trips of natural areas that
were threatened by development, such as the Indiana dunes.
Jensen had studied the dunes landscape along with his friend
and colleague, the eminent plant ecologist Henry C. Cowles.
In 1908, more than 300 people participated in a Saturday
Afternoon Walking Trip of the dunes. The Prairie Club built
a permanent beach house on the dunes at Tremont, Indiana,
in 1913. To celebrate the event, the club produced and performed
a special masque entitled "The Spirit of the Dunes."
Jensen
inspired the formation of another organization Friends
of Our Native Landscape in 1913. The Friends and
Prairie Club together fought to save the Indiana dunes.
Jensen had asked his wealthy client Henry Ford to purchase
thousands of acres of dune property to create a public arboretum
there. However, when land speculators heard that Ford was
interested, prices began escalating and he soon backed away.
When Stephen Mather, a member of Friends of Our Native Landscape,
was appointed as the first director of the National Park
Service, the dunes effort became more promising. Mather
held a public hearing to discuss the Indiana dunes in 1916.
Jensen and other members of the Friends and Prairie Club
provided testimony. However, there were Indiana politicians
who wanted industrial development and objected to the idea
of a park that would be heavily used by Chicagoans.
The
Prairie Club continued its fight to protect the dunes. In
1917, they staged a huge dunes pageant with hundreds of
cast members. More than 50,000 people attended two performances
of the pageant. Despite the success of the event, Congress
did not move forward on the idea of creating a Dunes National
Park. The Prairie club shifted its focus to state government,
and finally in 1926, 2,250 acres were designated as the
Indiana Dunes State Park.
Columbus
Park: The Prairie Idealized
During
the years in which Jensen served as a director of the Prairie
Club, between 1911 and 1914, he realized that he would have
his first and only opportunity to create a whole new large
park in Chicago. In 1912, the West Park Commissioners acquired
a 144-acre site on Chicagos west side called Warren
Woods or the Austin Site. This property, which was later
renamed Columbus Park, boasted fields, wooded areas, and
traces of sand dune. In 1915, even before Jensen completed
the design for the park, the commissioners opened a temporary
nine-hole golf course, tennis courts, baseball diamonds,
and football fields there. Political winds began shifting
once again, and in 1920, Jensen severed his relationship
with the West Park Commission for the last time. Though
he did not oversee the sites completion, Jensen considered
Columbus Park his masterpiece.
Jensens vision for Columbus Park was inspired by the
sites natural history and topography. In surveying
the unimproved site, Jensen found traces of sand dune, and
determined these were an ancient beach. Following that theme,
he designed a series of berms, reminiscent of glacial ridges,
encircling the flat interior portion of the park. Along
the remaining traces of the lake beach, he created a meandering
lagoon to emulate a natural prairie river and two waterfalls
of stratified stonework to represent the source of the waterway.
Near
the juncture of the two brooks, Jensen designed a "players
green," with a lawn for the audience across the stream.
The edges of the stage were thickly planted with elms, ash,
maples, hawthorns, crabapples, sumac, hazel, and wildflowers,
leaving two sun-openings as "back stage" changing-areas
for the performers.
Jensen
also created a clearing in the childrens playground
area to promote free play. At the edge he placed one of
his favorite design elements, a circular stone bench known
as a council ring. Stratified stonework was also used to
edge the parks original swimming pool. Designed to
emulate a country swimming hole, the pool was large enough
to accommodate as many as 7,000 swimmers per day. (The original
pool was replaced by a more modern facility in the 1950s.)
The
golf course was also very symbolic for Jensen. He viewed
the flat horizontal golf meadow as a metaphor for the prairie.
He provided shade for the golfers with small groves of trees
and shrubs and oriented the golf course towards the setting
sun.
Jensens
Legacy
In
1920, when Governor Frank Lowden removed all seven West
Park Commissioners from office, Jensen lost political support
once more and this ended his involvement in Chicagos
parks. However, Jensens private practice continued
to thrive. Between the early part of the century and the
1930s, Jensen had designed hundreds of parks, golf courses,
and the grounds for schools, hospitals, hotels, resorts,
and private residences throughout and beyond the Midwest.
He had collaborated with some of the nations most
renowned architects, including Frank Lloyd Wright, and his
client list included notable businessmen such as Henry and
Edsel Ford, Harold Florshiem, and Ogden Armour.
In
the early 1930s, during the Great Depression, Jensens
private practice had slowed. Jensens wife, Anne Marie,
passed away in 1934, and he decided to move to the familys
summer property in Ellison Bay, Wisconsin. Jensen decided
that he would open a school there entitled "The Clearing,"
focusing on hands-on work and environmentalism (see www.theclearing.org).
This school, and his last major work, Lincoln Memorial Garden,
in Springfield, Illinois, were the focus of the end of his
life. However, Jensens legacy has continued far beyond
his death in 1951.
Jensens
contributions to landscape design, conservation, and social
reform have steadily attracted attention over the years,
and a recent initiative has generated renewed attention
to his importance. Last year, a letter from a Jensen great
granddaughter, Marnie Wirtz, to Chicago Commissioner of
Cultural Affairs Lois Weisberg inspired the Jens Jensen
Legacy Project. This committee, formed by the City of Chicagos
Department of Cultural Affairs and Chicago Park District,
is devoted to celebrating and preserving Jensens work,
and inspiring new design and conservation efforts by educating
the public about Jensens contributions. A major Jensen
exhibition is planned at the Chicago Cultural Center in
2002, and a number of other educational efforts are underway.
To learn more about the Jens Jensen Legacy Project,
see www.jensjensen.org.
To receive newsletters about the project, call (312) 742-1771
or e-mail Jensen@winstarmail.com.
Julia
Sniderman Bachrach is the Chicago Park District historian.