翻訳と辞書 ・ Redbridge London Borough Council election, 2006 ・ Redbridge London Borough Council election, 2010 ・ Redbridge London Borough Council election, 2014 ・ Redbridge London Borough Council elections ・ Redbridge Parks Police ・ Redbridge railway station ・ Redbridge tube station ・ Redbridge, London ・ Redbridge, Ontario ・ Redbridge, Southampton ・ Redbrook ・ Redbrook on Wye railway station ・ Redbubble ・ Redbud Hollow ・ Redbud Park, California ・ Redbud Woods controversy ・ Redbud, Kentucky ・ Redburn ・ Redburn, Northumberland ・ Redbus ・ Redbus Film Distribution ・ Redbus Internet Exchange ・ Redbus.in ・ Redbush, Kentucky ・ Redby, Minnesota ・ Redcap ・ Redcap (disambiguation) ・ Redcap (novel) ・ Redcap (Research Electronic Data Capture) ・ Redcap (TV series)
|
|
Redbud Woods controversy : ウィキペディア英語版 | Redbud Woods controversy The Redbud Woods controversy was a dispute between protesters and the administration of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York over the demolition of a patch of woodlands known as the "Redbud Woods." The area received this name because of the many Redbud trees that grew there and whose blossoms gave the woods a pink tint in the springtime. The website of Cornell University Plantations contained, on September 3, 2005, a description of the woods, and used the name Redbud Woods, so it had some official status at Cornell under this name. == History == Early in Cornell's history, at the turn of the 20th century, banker and hardware magnate Robert H. Treman, Class of 1878, built his family estate on University Hill, just west of today's West Campus. Treman hired his friend Warren Manning, a pioneer of American landscape architecture, to design the site. The ''Ithaca Daily News'' of November 2, 1901 reported that the west lawn would be "left to nature as the best gardener." Upon his death in 1937, Treman, who preserved all of the Ithaca area's gorges, donated $5000 to the University specifically for the beautification of the campus. Much of his west lawn grew into the Redbud Woods, which retains many original Manning design elements and boasts locally rare yellow oak and hackberry trees as well as an unusually dense stand of redbuds. Redbud Woods was part of the landscaping of Robert H. Treman's historic estate. In the late 19th century Warren Manning designed the landscape of the Treman family estate (now Von Cramm Hall, 660, and the Kahin Center) so that it would grow into natural woodlands and beautify the campus. The woods, if left to grow untouched, might eventually reach the stage of a climax forest. Over time, Redbud Woods became perceived as a buffer between the University and the surrounding community. In 1970, the University proposed to construct a parking lot behind Von Cramm Hall. However, this proposal was dropped after by protests led by Gordon G. Chang.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Redbud Woods controversy」の詳細全文を読む
スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース |
Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
|
|