Seward Park (Manhattan)


Seward Park is a public park and playground in the Lower East Side neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City north of East Broadway, east of Essex Street. It is in size and is the first municipally built playground in the United States.

History

The park is named for William Henry Seward, a United States Senator from New York who served from 1849–1861 and later went on to be Secretary of State in the Lincoln administration. The park was built on a condemned piece of property purchased in 1897. New York City lacked the funds to do anything with it, so The Outdoor Recreation League, a playground and recreation advocacy group that built playgrounds in the undeveloped parks using temporary facilities and equipment, built the park as the first permanent, municipally built playground in the United States.
Opened on October 17, 1903, it was built with cinder surfacing, fences, a recreation pavilion, and children's play and gymnastic equipment. A large running track encircled the play area and children's garden. The park became a model for future playground architecture.
The Seward Park Branch of the New York Public Library was built in the southeastern part of the park.
In the 1930s and 1940s, the park was reconstructed and a piece of land was returned to the City. The Schiff Fountain, donated by Jacob H. Schiff, was moved from a nearby park and placed in Seward Park. In 1999, Seward Park was renovated again, and some of the original 1903 plans were restored.
Seward Park also holds one of the few statues in the United States dedicated to Togo, the sled dog who led the most treacherous route of the 1925 serum run to Nome, Alaska.