Memorial Park | |
---|---|
Type | City park |
Location | Omaha, Nebraska |
Coordinates | 41°15′45″N 96°00′05″W / 41.26250°N 96.00139°W |
Area | 67 acres (270,000 m2) |
Created | 1948 |
Operated by | Government of Omaha |
Status | Open all year |
Memorial Park is a 65-acre park located at 6005 Underwood Avenue near the Dundee neighborhood of Omaha, Nebraska. The park was created as a memorial for all of the men and women from Douglas County who have served in the armed forces.
History
On March 3, 1943, before the idea of a war memorial had been proposed, the defunct Dundee Golf Course property wasn't being used. A local Kiwanis Club suggested (and property owner Dundee Realty Company agreed) that two hundred apportioned Victory Gardens be sponsored and planted there.[1]
In a January 1944 letter to Henry Doorly, publisher of the Omaha World-Herald, Mrs. J W Broad, owner of the Gypsy Tea Shop noted that mothers and wives of those killed during World War II would come into her shop “looking so sorrowful”[2] She suggested that a monument be erected to honor the fallen. As a result, the World War II Memorial Association of Omaha was formed under the leadership of Storz Brewery owner Robert H. Storz and many other prominent citizens of Omaha.[3] He lamented a twelve-year struggle the American War Mothers experienced trying to raise money for a World War I monument in Omaha.[4] In 1925 a $250,000 structure of Bedford limestone designed by famed war memorial sculptor Lorado Taft, was proposed for a prominent point in Elmwood Park.[5] A scaled-back monument was eventually dedicated on November 1, 1937 at Turner Park.[6] Robert Storz was intent that a permanent and suitable World War II monument should be achieved.[7]
After years of zoning and legal disputes related to redevelopment plans, in August 1944, the World War II Memorial Association of Omaha executive committee and the Omaha City Council reached an agreement on the 22.91 acres of condemned Dundee Golf Course property (former Happy Hollow Country Club) near 60th Street and US Route 6 (Dodge Street). The remaining 42 acres of property were purchased from the Dundee Realty Company and the City of Omaha agreed to accept and maintain this ground for memorial park purposes.[8] After owner Mary George King (daughter of Charles Carlton George) handed over the land, Dundee Realty Company folded. Shortly afterward, Mary George King and her husband H. Stephen King moved to La Jolla, California.[9]
More than 3,000 individuals, patriot organizations, and business organizations, voluntarily contributed $233,732.59 for the purchase of land, architectural services, construction, and landscaping.[10]
In 1945 the Leo A Daly Company of Omaha was chosen as the chief architect for the planned war memorial. John Caspar Wister of Philadelphia was named landscaper and horticulturist.[11]
On Friday, June 4, 1948, President Harry S. Truman arrived in Omaha for the annual reunion of the 35th Infantry Division for which he served as officer Captain Harry Truman, commander of Battery D of the 129th Field Artillery Regiment.[12] The following day at 2:30pm the president placed a wreath dedicating the new World War II Memorial Park.[13] Truman then visited Boys Town and placed a wreath at the sarcophagus of Fr. Edward J Flanagan in the Dowd Memorial Chapel.[14]
In 1959 the Omaha Rose Society added a rose garden,[15] and in 1990 Woodmen of the World added flagpoles and flags along the driveway coming into memorial park.[16] A pedestrian bridge over Dodge Street called the Memorial Park Pedestrian Bridge was completed in 1968.[17] The park was the site of several curfew[18] and anti-Vietnam War protests by youth activists in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[19]
Volunteers continue to tend to over 1,000 rose bushes during the growing season.
Events
On the last Friday in June, there is a concert in the park along with a fireworks show in commemoration of the Independence Day (United States) holiday. Originally, the show was sponsored by Commercial Federal Bank. Later, the event was sponsored by Bank of the West. Currently, the event is called "The City of Omaha Celebrates America." The event attracts over 50,000 people each year to picnic, listen to music and watch an amazing fireworks presentation with friends and family. Many stake out large spots every year, like this patriotic display affectionately referred to as "The World's Largest American Flag Blanket!" Some claim it can be seen from space.
- Is this the World's Largest American Flag Blanket?
Here are the musical acts who have performed there:
1987 - The Lettermen
1988 - Bobby Vinton
1993 - Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons, The Drifters
1994 - Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, Bobby Vee
1995 - Frankie Avalon, Sha Na Na
1996 - The Temptations
1997 - The Four Tops, America
1998 - Neil Sedaka, The Shirelles
1999 - Blood, Sweat & Tears, The Drifters
2000 - The Righteous Brothers, The Supremes
2001 - The Beach Boys, Gary Puckett
2002 - Creedence Clearwater Revisited, The Spinners
2003 - The Village People, The Pointers
2004 - (rained out) The Doobie Brothers, Three Dog Night
Also in 2004, 311 played at Memorial Park for free in celebration of Omaha's 150th Anniversary. There were over 40,000 people there to celebrate.
2005 - The Doobie Brothers, Three Dog Night, Mulberry Lane
2006 - REO Speedwagon, The Fifth Dimension
2007 - KC & the Sunshine Band, Little River Band
2008 - (rained out) Kool & The Gang, .38 Special
2009 - The Guess Who, Grand Funk Railroad
2010 - The Bank of the West Celebrates America concert marked its 20th year in Omaha in 2010 by bringing the national “United In Rock” tour of Foreigner, Styx, and Kansas to the annual free live concert and fireworks show in Memorial Park on Friday, July 2, 2010. Officials estimated attendance reached a record 80,000 attendees.[20]
2011 - Cheap Trick, .38 Special, Take Me to Vegas. The stage moved (permanently) to the Dodge Street side of the Park for the 2011 concert.
2012 - Huey Lewis and the News, Mockingbird Sun, Scarlett Drive.
2013 - Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo, Loverboy
2014 - Smash Mouth, Blues Traveler, Sugar Ray, Uncle Kracker
2015 - Joan Jett, Eddie Money
2016 - Kenny Loggins
2017 - Kool & the Gang
2018 – Starship featuring Marty Balin
2019 – Little Steven & the Disciples of Soul
2020 – (event cancelled due to Covid Pandemic concerns)
2021 – (event scheduled for 8/28/21)
See also
References
- ↑ “Victory Gardens on Dundee Golf Course Prove Popular” Omaha World Herald, March 8, 1943, p1
- ↑ Dan McMullen, “Buffer Zone or Memorial?”, The Gateway, September 10, 1971, p9
- ↑ “Memorial Park ‘Sure Thing’ as 60 Pct. of Fund Reached”, Omaha World-Herald (published as SUNDAY WORLD-HERALD), January 28, 1945, p1
- ↑ Report of the Executive Committee World War II Memorial Park Association, February 20, 1946, pp 3
- ↑ “Taft Memorial Plan for Omaha is Huge Column” Omaha Bee, August 6, 1928
- ↑ “War Memorial is Dedicated” Omaha World-Herald, November 1, 1937, p2
- ↑ Storz, Robert (Memorial Park Association), personal letter to City Park Commissioner Roy N Towl, July 11, 1945
- ↑ Report of the Executive Committee World War II Memorial Park Association, February 20, 1946, pp 1-2
- ↑ Dan McMullen, “Buffer Zone or Memorial?”, The Gateway, September 10, 1971, p9
- ↑ Report of the Executive Committee World War II Memorial Park Association, February 20, 1946, p 2
- ↑ “Memorial Park Architect Named”, Omaha World-Herald (published as SUNDAY WORLD-HERALD), September 23, 1945, p1
- ↑ The Army Almanac, pp. 536-538.
- ↑ “35th Division Vets Gather for Reunion”, Omaha World-Herald (published as MORNING WORLD-HERALD), June 4, 1948, p1
- ↑ “Pres.Truman Visits Boys Town During Tour”, Our Sunday Visitor, June 13, 1948, p6
- ↑ "Rose Garden Planting to Start" Omaha World Herald, March 20, 1959, p19
- ↑ "City of Omaha parks & Recreation" City of Omaha. Retrieved 3/23/08.
- ↑ "Memorial Park Pedestrian Bridge" Archived 2009-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, Omaha Midcentury Modern. Retrieved 3/28/08.
- ↑ "City Officials Say Youth's Memorial Park Shenanigans Had Better Cease", Dundee and West Omaha Sun, November 11, 1965
- ↑ "Omaha Is on the Alert After 4 Nights of Unrest", The New York Times. July 11, 1971. Retrieved 4/20/08.
- ↑ Archived 2010-12-22 at the Wayback Machine Bank of the west. Retrieved 6/07/10.