Stewart Park (Ithaca, New York)
Stewart Park is a municipal park operated by the city of Ithaca, New York on the southern end of Cayuga Lake, the largest of New York's Finger Lakes.
Park description
The park offers space and facilities for outdoor recreation such as frisbee, tennis, baseball, softball, and fishing. The park has a carousel that operates throughout the summer. In addition, there is a playground with slides and a fountain, along with sheltered areas for picnics and large gatherings. The park is also equipped with grills dispersed around the grounds for barbecuing. The Cayuga Waterfront Trail runs through the park.Fall Creek empties into Cayuga Lake through Stewart Park. Stewart Park is also the location of the Cascadilla Boat Club's boathouse. The Fuertes Bird Sanctuary sits at the southern end of the park, and it is bordered on the west by the City of Ithaca's municipal golf course.
History
Stewart Park was originally part of Military Lot 88, a tract of land granted to Andrew Moody after the end of the Revolutionary War. Moody sold the land to James Renwick on December 12, 1790. It remained in his family for 104 years as an undeveloped parcel of land.In the early 1890s, of Renwick land was purchased by the Cascadilla School to build athletic facilities. At the same time, a trolley line leading to Cayuga Lake was constructed by the Cayuga Lake Electric Railway Company, who also set about developing an amusement park near the lake. The group of properties became known as Renwick Park, and opened to the public in 1894.
Upon opening, the park contained a zoo, a merry-go-round and a renovated dance pavilion for use as Ithaca's first vaudeville theater. However, in 1908, a decrease in the public's use of the railway system led to the dissolution of the Cayuga Lake Electric Railway Company; the company was replaced by the Renwick Park and Traffic Association. Trolley access to the park was completely discontinued in 1915. While this occurred, adjacent to the park were set aside as a bird sanctuary, maintained by the Cayuga Bird Club. Now known as the Fuertes Bird Sanctuary, it was named after a former club president upon his death in 1927.
The park officially closed in 1915, after which the land was leased to The Whartons film studio during Ithaca's brief heyday as a silent film production center from 1915 to 1919.
In 1920, Mayor Edwin C. Stewart declared during his inauguration speech that it was a "travesty" that Ithaca residents couldn't enjoy the lake without trespassing on private property. In 1921, the City of Ithaca purchased the former Renwick Park land and opened it to the public. Mayor Stewart died before the official opening of the park on July 4, and it was renamed in his honor.
In 1934, the park's land was raised by several feet to reduce flooding.
Although swimming had previously been allowed at the park, since 1964 a prohibition against swimming has been strongly enforced. The ban came about after a boy drowned when turbid, sediment-laden water prevented lifeguards from seeing him. Conditions particular to the lake, including the quantity of sediment at the lake's bottom and the prevailing currents at the lake's southern end, cause such murky and turbid conditions to be common, necessitating the ban on swimming.
A section of the Cayuga Waterfront Trail was completed in 2010, linking the Farmers Market at Steamboat Landing to the Visitors Center. This portion of the trail winds through Stewart Park and the Fuertes Bird Sanctuary.
In 2011, the began a wide-ranging rehabilitation and restoration project for Stewart Park. This effort began with the renovation of the Mayor Stewart Memorial Flagpole garden. Since that time, Friends of Stewart Park in partnership with the City of Ithaca, have lead a major revitalizaiton effort including reconstruction of the small Tea Pavilion, restoration of the large Picnic Pavilion, restoration of the swan pond overlook, roof replacements on the Wharton Building and Cascadilla Boathouse, and many smaller improvements throughout the park. Further planned improvements include an accessible playground and splash pad, full exterior restoration on the Cascadilla Boathouse and creation of the in the Wharton Building that housed the film studio.
Historic Buildings and Landmarks of Stewart Park
- Cacadilla Boathouse - Built starting in 1894, this building is still used today by the rowing organization. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
- Large Picnic Pavilion - Designed by architects Clarence Vivian and Arthur Gibb, apprentices to prominent Ithaca architect William Henry Miller, the Picnic Pavilion was constructed around 1895 as part of an Italianate-inspired architectural theme, with peristyle columned porch and semi-circular door and window features. The Picnic Pavilion was most recently restored in 2019. It is available for rent through the City of Ithaca.
- Small Tea Pavilion - Designed by Clarence Vivian and Arthur Gibb and originally built in 1895, the Tea Pavilion once served as the welcoming point for visitors to the park, and was the last stop on the trolley ride to Renwick Park from downtown Ithaca. The open-air pavilion was moved several times within the park, but landed in its current location in the 1950s when the playground and Carousel were installed. By 2011 the building had fallen into disrepair. The origninal structure was torn down, but was rebuilt to its original design. It is available for rent through the City of Ithaca.
- Fuertes Overlook - the "Swan Pond" overlook was built by the Cayuga Bird Club in 1934 for ease of pond observation and restored in 2017 by Friends of Stewart Park.
- Renwick Wildwood Arch - Designed by Louis Agassiz Fuertes and constructed by the Cayuga Bird Club in 1917, this arch was made to mark the approach to the Renwick Wildwood.
- Carousel -Designed by the Allan Herschell Company and installed in 1951, the Stewart Park Carousel has been in continuous seasonal operation since. Carousel horses were repainted in 1986 by Trumansburg artist Annie Campbell and again in 2014 by Ithaca artists Christi Sobel and Julia John. A new black metal fence was installing in 2016 and an accessible wheelchair ramp and chariot were added in 2018.