HISTORY ARTICLES |
RADBURN IN “THE CITY:” SCENES OF THE PAST By Rick Hampson and Stephen Taylor The 1939 New York World’s Fair promised to show visitors “the World of Tomorrow.’’ One fair attraction that did so was a short documentary film called The City. And in addition to showing fairgoers what the future might look like, it shows us today what Radburn looked like.
We can see the nursery used by Radburn’s landscape architect. Marjorie Sewell Cautley, just north of the Plaza Building (where an apartment complex stands today). Brearly Crescent is undeveloped. The London plane trees lining Plaza Road are shorter. A barn stands at the intersection of Craig Road and High Street. A line of old farm trees marks the edge of what is now Tot Lot. The B Pool has a different orientation. There’s an empty lot at the end of Ballard Place -- #15 has not yet been built. 2 . Jungle gym This piece of equipment used to stand in the Big Toy playground. 3. B Park Various willow trees (including a weeping willow) planted by Marjorie Sewell Cautley shade the perimeter of the park. Understory plantings provide rich layering. With the exception of two red pine specimens, all are now gone. The roofline of houses lining the park is different, because spaces above garages have since been filled in. Fourteen Berkeley Place is on the left and Bancroft Place houses are on the right. The football scene -- boys in pads being coached or supervised by an adult – is a reminder of Radburn's extensive recreation program. 4. The Tunnel The classic scene of Radburn children is shot from B Park looking toward A park. Note the rose bushes designed to keep pedestrians on the path. Some of these New Dawn cultivars are preserved in Radburn house gardens, but there are none left in the areas around the tunnel. A car passes overhead on Howard Avenue. 5. R Park Note the entrance sign in the first frame; this was at the time a major approach to Radburn. The lamp post is original. Does the circular hedgerow at the bottom of the steps (a classic Cautley form) have a table inside? There are no houses visible on the west (Plaza Road) side of the park. The horse riders are a reminder of the fact that there was a stable in the area, and that there were only open fields in the general direction of Sanford Road. Note the entrance sign in the first frame; this was at the time a major approach to Radburn. The lamp post is original. Does the circular hedgerow at the bottom of the steps (a classic Cautley form) have a table inside? There are no houses on the Plaza Road side of the park. The horse riders are a reminder of the fact that there was a stable in the area, and that there were only open fields in the general direction of Sanford Road. |