No other city in the world has a park system as great as Chicago's,
which includes over 550 parks totaling more than 7,000 acres. Each park
has its own story, as well as unique characteristics and history, and
yet the majority of Chicagoans are not aware of the wealth, variety, and
sheer number of parks that exist, to say nothing of the ideas they
project, the history they commemorate, and the origins of their names.
Chicago's Parks: A Photographic History seeks to remedy this oversight.
From Chicago's first park, Dearborn Park, to its more famous parks of
Grant and Lincoln, this book provides a wealth of information concerning
the origins of the names and plans of these Chicago landmarks. A formal
plan for the creation of a park system was developed in 1869, and soon
Chicago had some of the greatest parks to be found anywhere in the
world. When Chicago was founded in 1837, the city's fathers adopted the
motto urbs in horto, or the city set in a garden. Despite the numerous
changes that have taken place over the past 160 years, Chicago is still
a city set in a garden. Chicago's Parks: A Photographic History captures
the growth of that garden with its nearly 200 historic photographs.