San Francisco's Golden
Gate Park is larger than New York's Central Park and once
consisted of just sand dunes. It is now covered with more than one
million trees and is home to a small herd of bison.
To the people in 1870 out of the prescient notion that San Franciscans
would one day feel overcrowded. This foresight proved invaluable,
as 75,000 people now visit the Golden Gate Park on an average
weekend.
Finding the land was the easy part. Someone still had to make grass
and trees grow out of sand dunes blasted by harsh oceanside winds.
The person to do it was John McLaren, a brazen Scotsman and ardent
nature lover. He arrived in San Francisco in the 1870s, and by 1890
he had established grass, trees and numerous plants in an environment
most thought too barren for lush foliage.
The first buildings in the Golden Gate Park came with the Midwinter
Fair, a sprawling expo and carnival meant to boost the economy and
increase tourism. San Francisco wanted to prove that it had culture
-- so a fine-arts museum was built. To prove that outdoor activities
could be pursued, horse stables and vast, unlandscaped greens were
preserved. And to showcase the exotic and quirky atmosphere of the
San Francisco, several theme areas were developed, including Cairo
Street, Japanese Village and an Eskimo habitat.
The fair succeeded at what it set out to do. Millions of people
visited San Francisco, business boomed and locals found renewed
pride in their formerly sand-covered park. Today, the only remnants
of that enormous event are the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, the
Japanese Tea Garden and the Music Concourse esplanade.
What remains today is a testament to the will of San Francisco to
preserve a place to play, relax and grow culturally. Following are
more than 50 ways to spend a day in the park, ranging from French
lawn bowling to riding an 87-year-old carousel.
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