Roadside park

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File:Iron County Roadside Park.jpg
Iron County Roadside Park
A roadside park in Wyoming County, Pennsylvania

A roadside park is a designated park on the wide side of a road for the traveling tourist usually maintained by a governmental entity, either local, state, or national. It is for recreational use such as a picnic spot or a trail head. A roadside park will generally be found in a rural setting, whereas a rest area will be found on an interstate highway in a suburban setting or between major destinations like cities. A rest area is specifically designed for the rest and relaxation of the motoring public. The roadside park with the use of picnic tables is the predecessor of the modern rest area / travel plaza.[1]

Many roadside parks have restroom facilities or at least pit toilets, where some small roadside parks have no restroom facilities at all. Some have water and many are designated on state maps with a small picnic table.

Some continents have roadside parks, however they are not a worldwide phenomenon. They are popular in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe, however basically not known in Mexico, Central America, South America, Africa, nor the Far East Asian countries.

History

File:Roadside park with facilities.jpg
Contains water, pit toilets, state map
File:Roadside park sign.jpg
Roadside park sign to alert travelers
File:Carrabelle Beach picnic area.jpg
A roadside park in Florida

Herbert F. Larson started the idea of the roadside park.[2] History records that the idea goes back to 1918 in the early days of auto touring.[2] Larson was then a history-minded highway engineer just out of the University of Michigan School of Engineering.[2] He came back to Iron County where he grew up to manage the highway department.[2]

Most of the big pines in Iron County were being cut down by the lumber companies at this time. Larson seeing this hoped someday to keep scenic wide strips of old growth trees along Iron County's principal roads. He envisioned the possibility of a <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

living forest memorial of virgin hardwoods so that posterity could see and enjoy what nature had richly bestowed upon us.[2]

In his words he <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

tried to keep alert and ahead of the woodsman's axe." [3]

The inspiration of the roadside park idea came from a disappointed Sunday outing of a nearby Wisconsin lake country picnic. In 1919 northern Wisconsin lake resorts were growing rapidly. On a particular Sunday of that year, Larson tried to have a cookout with a group of people in Wisconsin. Everywhere they went the property caretaker asked them to not have their picnic on the property and escourted them off the grounds.

Larson wrote, <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

In upper Michigan we could go where we chose with no one to bother us.[2]

He did not want the nearby Upper Peninsula of Michigan to suffer a similar loss of the much-loved pastime of picnicing. This is where he was inspired with the idea of a wide right of way road spot as a roadside park.[2] One day Larson learned that a particular prominently located parcel of land of uncut virgin woods east of Iron River, Michigan, on U.S. 2 might be up for sale. He went to the landowners with the support of the Iron County board chairman. They then negotiated with the owners and bought it as a forest memorial public woods.[2] This is where he placed his first picnic table for a designated rest spot for the motoring public.[2][4][5] There is a possibility this was even the first designated automobile rest area anywhere in the world.[2][6][7] It is located at coordinates N 46.1067 W -88.54.78[8] in a stand of old-growth hardwood trees. Presently, it has many picnic tables and grills. There are pit toilets provided there today, whereas when it was first introduced it consisted only of a single picnic table.[2]

Larson’s roadside park rest stop idea quickly spread all over the United States in most of the states already by the 1920s.[2] His roadside park idea soon attracted large gatherings and became a trend-setting phenomenon.[2] Its success inspired Larson's later projects of Pentoga Park[1] and Bewabic Park.[3]

Michigan historical marker

File:Roadside table sign.jpg
Site of the first roadside picnic table

There is a historical marker at the Iron River site that reads:

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In 1918 the Iron County Board of Supervisors approved the recommendation of the road commission, through its engineer-manager, Herbert F. Larson, to purchase this 320-acre (1.3 km2) tract of roadside virgin timber and to dedicate it as a forest preserve. The following year Iron County established Michigan's first roadside park and picnic tables. This was quite likely America's first such facility. Since then similar parks have been provided by most states for the comfort and enjoyment of the traveling motorist. [9][10]

References