Filed Under Parks

Lincoln Park

Tremont's Village Green

Thirza Skinner Pelton and her husband Brewster Pelton purchased the land that became Lincoln Park in 1850 from Francis Branch, the son of a Connecticut pioneer who settled what is now the Tremont neighborhood in 1818. The Peltons intended part of the land they purchased to become the campus of the new Cleveland University. The wealthy couple had come to Cleveland from the nearby college town of Oberlin, OH, where they operated a boarding house for students. Things did not work out as planned: Mrs. Pelton, the primary benefactor of the new college, died in 1853 and Cleveland University soon closed. Altogether, CU graduated only 11 students. Only one of the buildings that composed the school’s campus survives: Tremont Place Lofts (formerly Union Gospel Press). Cleveland University’s plans also called for buildings to be erected on a private space owned by Ms. Pelton. This is the bucolic gathering spot we now call Lincoln Park.

After Mrs. Pelton’s death and the closing of Cleveland University, Brewster Pelton continued to keep the greens of Cleveland University—Pelton Park, as it came to be known—private. A fence and locked gates kept unwanted visitors out. In the late 1850s this became a source of great controversy as angry residents repeatedly destroyed the fence, demanding that the park be opened to the public. After Brewster’s death in 1872, Cleveland attempted to take control of the land but was prevented from doing so by the courts. Finally, in 1879, the City conducted successful negotiations with Brewster’s heirs and purchased the park for $50,000. On July 4, 1880, South Side Park (renamed Lincoln Park in 1896) opened to the public with an Independence Day gala that included a barbecue and long speeches by prominent politicians.

Audio

"Common Ground" Dr. John Grabowski, Krieger-Mueller Associate Professor in Applied History at Case Western Reserve University and Director of Research at The Western Reserve Historical Society, describes some of the places in Tremont where people of different ethnic backgrounds congregated. Source: Courtesy of John Grabowski

Images

Lincoln Park, ca. 1910
Lincoln Park, ca. 1910 One of the tree-lined walking paths in the redeveloped and renamed park on the South Side of Cleveland. Source: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections Date: ca. 1910
South Side Park
South Side Park This part of the Cuyahoga County Atlas of 1892 reveals the configuration of the walking paths on South Side Park in what is today the Tremont neighborhood. The park was named South Side park in 1879 when it was purchased from the heirs of Brewster Pelton, the South Side resident who had fought the city in court for years to keep the park private. The park was renamed Lincoln Park in 1896. Source: Cleveland Public Library Map Collection Date: 1892
Lincoln Park, ca. 1910
Lincoln Park, ca. 1910 Originally called Pelton Park and later South Side Park, the space was redeveloped and renamed Lincoln Park in 1896 to honor America's sixteenth president. Source: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections
The first Concert in the Park held in Cleveland
The first Concert in the Park held in Cleveland This article from the July 29, 1911, Plain Dealer describes the first band concert in a public park in Cleveland. It occurred on June 4, 1896, in South Side Park, renamed Lincoln Park in that same year. Source: Cleveland State University Library Special Collections Date: July 29, 1911
Conservatory, ca. 1910
Conservatory, ca. 1910 The Lincoln Park conservatory was part of the re-development and renaming of South Side Park by the City of Cleveland in 1896. It reflected the City Beautiful movement in the country. Tremont's Lincoln Park may have indeed been modeled after the similarly named park in Chicago, the city that gave birth to the movement and whose own Lincoln Park also featured a conservatory. Source: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections
Cleanup, 1978
Cleanup, 1978 Volunteers pick up leaves and garbage in Tremont's Lincoln Park, 1978. Lincoln Park continues to be the center of the Tremont neighborhood—a place where children play and where neighbors gather for community events such as art festivals and farmers markets. Source: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections Date: 1978

Location

1200 Starkweather Ave, Cleveland, OH 44113

Metadata

Michael Rotman, “Lincoln Park,” Cleveland Historical, accessed May 14, 2024, https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/89.