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Frederick Law Olmsted
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===Journalism=== Olmsted had a significant career in journalism. In 1850 he traveled to England to visit public gardens, where he was greatly impressed by [[Joseph Paxton]]'s [[Birkenhead Park]]. He subsequently wrote and published ''Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England'' in 1852.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Homsy|first=Bryn|date=2001|title=Frederick Law Olmsted|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/44791222|journal=Historic Gardens Review|issue=9|pages=2β7|jstor=44791222|issn=1461-0191}}</ref> This supported his getting additional work. His visit to Birkenhead Park inspired his later contribution to the design of [[Central Park]] in New York City.<ref>{{cite book|last=Olmsted|first=Frederick Law|author-link=Frederick Law Olmsted|title=Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England|url=https://archive.org/details/walkstalksofamer00olmsuoft|publisher=George E. Putnam|year=1852|oclc=3900449|page=83}}</ref> Interested in the slave economy, he was commissioned by the ''New York Daily Times'' (now ''[[The New York Times]]'') to embark on an extensive research journey through the [[American South]] and [[Texas]] from 1852 to 1857. His dispatches to the ''Times'' were collected into three volumes (''A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States'' (1856), ''A Journey Through Texas'' (1857), ''A Journey in the Back Country in the Winter of 1853β4'' (1860). These are considered vivid first-person accounts of the antebellum South. A one-volume abridgment, ''Journeys and Explorations in the Cotton Kingdom'' (1861), was published in England during the first six months of the [[American Civil War]], at the suggestion of Olmsted's English publisher.<ref>Cf. Wilson, p. 220. "At the beginning of the Civil War, it was suggested by Olmsted's English publisher that a one-volume abridgment of all three of these books would be of interest to the British public, and Olmsted, then busy with Central Park, arranged to have this condensation made by an anti-slavery writer from North Carolina. Olmsted himself contributed to a new introduction on ''The Present Crisis''."</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Stampp, Kenneth M.|author-link=Kenneth M. Stampp|doi=10.1086/ahr/59.1.141 |title=review of ''The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations on Cotton and Slavery in the American Slave States. Based upon Three Former Volumes of Journeys and Investigations by the Same Author'' by Frederick Law Olmsted; edited, with an introduction by Arthur M. Schlesinger|journal=The American Historical Review |date=1953 }} [https://archive.org/details/8199d8e2-6d13-4b7b-8799-b595e8c9e32a/page/n5/mode/2up vol. 1 of 1861 edition] [https://archive.org/details/cottonkingdomtra00olms/page/n5/mode/2up vol. 2 of 1861 edition]</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1215/00382876-54-1-164 |title=review of ''The Cotton Kingdom'' by Frederick Law Olmsted; edited, with an introduction, by Arthur M. Schlesinger|date=1955 |last1=Woody |first1=Robert Hilliard|journal=South Atlantic Quarterly |volume=54 |pages=164β165 |s2cid=257878647 }}</ref> To this, he wrote a new introduction (on "The Present Crisis"). He stated his views on the effect of slavery on the economy and social conditions of the southern states: {{blockquote|My own observation of the real condition of the people of our Slave States, gave me ... an impression that the cotton monopoly in some way did them more harm than good; and although the written narration of what I saw was not intended to set this forth, upon reviewing it for the present publication, I find the impression has become a conviction.}} He argued that slavery had made the slave states inefficient (a set amount of work took 4 times as long in Virginia as in the North) and backward both economically and socially. He said that the profits of slavery were enjoyed by no more than 8,000 owners of large plantations; a somewhat larger group had about the standard of living of a New York City policeman, but the proportion of the free white men who were as well-off as a Northern working man was small. Slavery meant that 'the proportion of men improving their condition was much less than in any Northern community; and that the natural resources of the land were strangely unused, or were used with poor economy.' He thought that the lack of a Southern white middle class and the general poverty of lower-class whites prevented the development of many civil amenities that were taken for granted in the North. {{blockquote|The citizens of the cotton States, as a whole, are poor. They work little, and that little, badly; they earn little, they sell little; they buy little, and they have little β very little β of the common comforts and consolations of civilized life. Their destitution is not material only; it is intellectual and it is moral ... They were neither generous nor hospitable and their talk was not that of evenly courageous men.<ref>Olmsted, Frederick Law, [https://archive.org/details/cottonkingdomat07olmsgoog <!-- quote=the cotton kingdom. --> ''The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations on Cotton and Slavery in the American Slave States. Based Upon Three Former Volumes of Journeys and Investigations''], Mason Brothers, 1862.</ref>}} Between his travels in Europe and the South, Olmsted served as an editor for ''[[Putnam's Magazine]]'' for two years<ref name="magazines"/> and as an agent with Dix, Edwards and Co., before the company's insolvency during the [[Panic of 1857]]. Olmsted provided financial support for, and occasionally wrote for, the magazine ''[[The Nation (U.S. periodical)|The Nation]]'', which was founded in 1865.<ref name="magazines">{{cite journal |url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2015/nov/05/frederick-law-olmsted-americas-green-giant/ |title=America's Green Giant |last=Filler |first=Martin |author-link=Martin Filler |date=November 5, 2015 |volume=62 |number=17 |journal=[[New York Review of Books]] |access-date=November 8, 2015}}</ref> "Olmsted spent much of his free time working without pay as an editorial assistant to [the magazine's first editor, Edwin L.] [[Edwin Lawrence Godkin|Godkin]]. It was a labor of love."<ref>Hall, Lee, ''Olmsted's America'', p. 147.</ref>
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