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Carl Rust Parker

Land

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The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on July 16. It is reproduced in full below.

Notable Projects while at the Olmsted Firm:

George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Alexandria, Virginia

Maine State Capitol Grounds, Augusta, Maine

Grounds for the National Cash Register Company, Dayton, Ohio

Various Projects for the University of Mississippi in Oxford and Jackson, Mississippi

Carl Rust Parker was born in Andover, Massachusetts in 1882. He attended Phillips Academy, and immediately after graduating in 1901, began working for the Olmsted firm. He left the Olmsted firm in 1910 to set up practice in Maine, and quickly became the state’s most prominent landscape architect. In his private practice, he left a lasting imprint on that state in the form of private residences, parks and public buildings. A listing in the 1911-1912 Maine Register advertised him as a “Designer of Parks, Playgrounds, Private Grounds, Gardens and Land Developments." He returned to the Olmsted firm after World War I, eventually becoming a partner in 1950, and he worked there until his retirement in 1961.

At this time, he was involved with a wide range of projects, which included estate and campus designs, and planning the grounds of various industrial companies, such as for the National Cash Register Company in Ohio, for the Bell Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey and for the Kohler Company in Kohler, Wisconsin. Throughout his career, Parker was greatly involved in the American Society of Landscape Architects, becoming a member in 1908 and a Fellow in 1915.

Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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