Hemming Park
Hemming Park | |
---|---|
Hemming Park | |
Type | Municipal (Parks & Recreation Department) |
Location | Jacksonville, Florida |
Coordinates | 30°19′45″N 81°39′33″W / 30.32917°N 81.65917°W[1] |
Area | 1.54 acres (6,200 m2) |
Created | 1857 |
Operated by | City of Jacksonville |
Visitors | 1 million |
Status | Open all year |
Hemming Park is a 1.54-acre (6,200 m2) public park, located in the heart of the government center in downtown Jacksonville, Florida. Originally a village green, it was the first and is the oldest park in the city.[2]
History
Beginnings
The area was established as a public square in 1857 by Isaiah Hart, founder of Jacksonville. After Hart's death in 1861 and the end of the Civil War, the Hart family deeded the land to the city for $10. It was first known as “City Park”, then “St. James Park” after the grand St. James Hotel was constructed across the street in 1869. The following year, another major hotel was built across from the park.
The area was renamed Hemming Park in 1899 in honor of Civil War veteran Charles C. Hemming, after he installed a 62-foot (19 m)-tall Confederate monument in the park in 1898.[3] Hemming was born in Jacksonville. He later moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado and became a banker, making a fortune.[1] The memorial is the oldest in the city and was the tallest at the time.[2]
The Great Fire of 1901 destroyed most of the wooden structures in Jacksonville and many others, too. The St. James Hotel burned to the ground and the owner did not have the cash to rebuild. In 1910, Jacob and Morris Cohen, who owned a local dry goods company, engaged 34-year-old architect, Henry John Klutho to fast track design and manage the construction of a four-story building to house their store. The name "St. James Building" stuck to the property and the building.
In past years, the park contained bandstands, fountains, comfort stations and buildings for the Tourist & Convention Bureau. Presidents, political candidates and visiting dignitaries have greeted citizens at this central site.[3] During the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon both gave speeches at Hemming Park a few hours apart on October 18.[4] President Lyndon Johnson delivered a speech in Hemming Park on October 26, 1964.
Civil rights protests
Because of its high visibility and patronage, the park and surrounding stores were the site of numerous civil rights demonstrations in the 1960s in the African-American effort to end racial segregation in public facilities. At the time, the city's population was about 45% black. Rutledge Pearson, a local high school teacher, and the NAACP organized many students to participate in sit-ins. Rodney Hurst was the president at age 16 of the NAACP youth council and years later, said the students were determined to carry out the protests to gain rights of service in stores that gladly accepted .[5]
Pearson and members of the NAACP had met with the city's mayor to ask for his support in integration but were rejected.[6] The sit-ins began on August 13, 1960: students asked to be served at the segregated lunch counters at Morrison's Cafeteria, Woolworths, and other stores, where the black community spent much money in retail purchases. They were denied service and frequently kicked, spit at, and addressed with racial slurs. This pattern continued for two weeks, until the 27th, a day now referred to as Ax Handle Saturday. On that day, a group of 200 "middle-age and elderly white men,"[6] including some members of the Ku Klux Klan, were arming themselves with axe handles and baseball bats. The student protesters were warned but each wanted to go ahead. The armed group entered the store where they started attacking the students. Some of these found sanctuary in Historic Snyder Memorial, then a Methodist church.[7] A couple of youths alerted the "Boomerangs," a group of older black youth, who entered the fray to protect the demonstrators.[7]
Although the organizers had alerted the police when they saw armed men, law enforcement did not intervene until the Boomerangs and other blacks started fighting back to stop the beatings.[6] Fifty people were injured and 62 were arrested, 14 whites and 48 blacks.[5] The day's events were covered by national TV, as well as major newspapers such as the New York Times and Los Angeles Times.[5] Alton Yates, participated as a 24-year-old, but said some of the protesters were as young as 13, and he was shocked to see men beating children. He said the organizers gathered their forces again and continued sit-ins. In addition, committees of blacks and whites met to discuss and resolve racial issues.[6] In April 1961, two leaders of the NAACP Youth Council ate at Woolworth's for a week to prepare the public for integration.[5]
Finally after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the city completed integration of water fountains, restrooms, and dressing rooms.[5][8][5] On August 26, 2000, the NAACP, the National Conference for Community and Justice, the Jacksonville Historical Society, the Human Rights Commission, and the Jacksonville Urban League hosted events to commemorate the history and celebrate the city's progress in the 40 years since then.[5]
Master Plan
The Downtown Development Authority (DDA) was created in 1970 to reverse white flight, related to suburbanization and development of retail malls, and end urban blight. They hired RTKL Associates Inc., planning consultants from Baltimore, Maryland to study Jacksonville's situation. Their recommendations were incorporated into the 1971 Downtown Master Plan, using the idea of creating a Pedestrian mall surrounded by a transportation loop and abundant free parking. Another plan component was a group of elevated walkways that would permit shoppers to avoid traffic while moving from the retail core to the riverfront, which would contain a park, convention center including hotel, an exhibition center, Sears Department Store, and a high-rise containing financial offices.[9] The plan was supposed to be completed within 20 years, but many components were never implemented.
Bust
By the mid-1970s, the image of the park had changed. Because the downtown had been invaded by thousands of starlings, the city had removed shade trees to drive the invaders from the park. The City renovated the park in 1977 at a cost of $648,000,[9] converting it into a concrete/brick-paved square and changing the name to Hemming Plaza.
The second phase of city redevelopment was budgeted at $2.2 million, but was delayed in 1979. The money was used to construct a University Boulevard overpass of the rail yard adjacent to Philips Highway. Money was again budgeted in 1981, but was used instead to widen 103rd Street. In 1984, the project began, and lasted over two years.[9]
By this time, the city's big retailers had already built new stores at the malls to meet suburban demand. The last three major stores closed their downtown locations. The empty storefronts attracted the homeless and the 1971 master plan became irrelevant.[4]
Rebuilding
The Federal Government spent $84 million for the John Milton Bryan Simpson United States Courthouse, which broke ground in 2000 and opened in 2003, across from the Plaza. Over $162 million was invested by the city in the buildings surrounding Hemming Plaza, including:[4]
- St. James Building: $24 million renovation for a new City Hall
- New Downtown Library & parking garage: $100 million
- Ed Ball Building: $25 million renovation for city government office building
- Jacksonville Museum of Contemporary Art: $1.5 million for renovation
- Haverty's Building: $10 million renovation for a new City Hall Annex
- Snyder Memorial Church Building: $1.3 million for renovation
Friends of Hemming Park
In September 2014, the city of Jacksonville entered into a public-private agreement with the nonprofit organization,[10] Friends of Hemming Park, to manage the park. The organization is charged with revitalizing and programming the square. The 501(c)3 nonprofit organization was created by community leaders and members of The Cultural Council of Jacksonville, and Downtown Vision, Inc.
Current uses
The area has been replanted with trees and offers abundant shade.[2] In 2003, a farmers’ market opened at the Plaza on Fridays from 10am-2pm, year-round.[11] A life-size cast bronze statue of the late U.S. Rep. Charles Edward Bennett, who served Northeast Florida in Congress for 44 years, was installed on a granite base in Hemming Plaza on April 23, 2004.[12] The first Wednesday of every month, Hemming Park is converted into the centerpiece of Jacksonville's Downtown Art Walk. The third Thursday of every month Hemming Park hosts a night market called Jaxsons Night Market.
References
- 1 2 Waymarking: Confederate Memorial - Hemming Plaza - Jacksonville, FL
- 1 2 3 City of Jacksonville website: Recreation and Community Services-Hemming Plaza
- 1 2 City of Jacksonville: Public Information-Photo Archive
- 1 2 3 Floridas Times-Union: May 28, 2007-New life in vision for Hemming by Charlie Patton
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Alliniece T. Andino, "40 years ago this weekend, Jacksonville gave itself a national reputation for violence", Florida Times-Union, 25 August 2000
- 1 2 3 4 Alton Yates, "Civil rights", Florida Times-Union, 21 February 1999
- 1 2 Charlie Patton, "Discrimination in all its forms must be axed", Florida Times-Union, 24 August 2000
- ↑ Gil Wilson, "St. Augustine Civil Rights 1960-1965" , Dr. Bronson Tours
- 1 2 3 , Florida Times-Union,11 September 2009, "Visions of Yesteryear: The 1971 Downtown Master Plan"
- ↑ http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2014-11-11/story/changes-hemming-park-starting-next-month-says-group-handling-makeover
- ↑ Local Community Farmers' Markets-Hemming Plaza, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
- ↑ Florida Times-Union: April 16, 2004- Life-size likeness of Bennett comes to Hemming Plaza by Jessie-Lynne Kerr