| |
ORGANIZATION AND
GOVERNANCE OF TOWER GROVE PARK
Tower
Grove Park was first authorized by a state law passed on March
9, 1867, and came into existence on October 20, 1868, when
Henry Shaw conveyed his lands to the City of St. Louis, by
deed of gift. It is governed by a Board of Commissioners appointed
under the authority of the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri.
The Director of the Missouri Botanical Garden is one of these
Commissioners, by virtue of his office.
Under the terms of the 1867 act of the General Assembly of
the State, the Park Board has the “full and exclusive
power to govern, manage, direct and control” the park,
“to pass ordinances” for its regulation and government,
and, generally, has “all the power and authority …
conferred upon or possessed by the Corporation of St. Louis
in respect to the public squares and places” in St.
Louis. The Commissioners submit an annual report to the Board
of Alderman of the City.
Fulfilling
the contractual obligations assumed in 1868, when the Mayor
and Henry Shaw jointly signed the deed, the City supplied
funds for the improvement of the land, and each year since
then has placed funds in the hands of the Board, to be expended
upon the Park at the discretion of the Commissioners.
For twenty years as the work of improving the Park land proceeded,
Mr. Shaw gave his services as Comptroller and general supervisor,
and during that period of devotion to the public welfare,
he personally donated to the Park three noteworthy bronze
statues and other works of art.
Tower Grove Park is a nearly rectangular tract 7,676 feet
long and 1,550 feet wide, as originally platted. The area
granted by Mr. Shaw’s deed was 276.76 acres, but the
outer border, 200 feet wide, containing 74.74 acres, was reserved
for leasing for villa residences, but this never materialized.
Problems involved in the effort to carry out this provision
resulted in many years of negotiation. In 1925, a satisfactory
solution was reached, and this surrounding strip was legally
merged in the Park.
There
still remained a privately owned strip of land adjoining the
Park at the northwest, known as the Payne Tract and containing
about eight acres, which Mr. Shaw had desired to include in
the Park. Through purchase and condemnation, this land was
acquired before the end of 1926, and became in all respects
a part of the Park.
Tower
Grove Park is now a unit enclosed by four streets, and contains
289 acres. It is the second in size in St. Louis, and exceeds
the next largest local park by more than 100 acres.
Revised March, 2002
|