Shemanski Fountain: Difference between revisions
WikiMaster (talk | contribs) m (Start article.) |
WikiMaster (talk | contribs) m (Add external link.) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
== External Links == | == External Links == | ||
* [http://photos.salemhistory.net/cdm/singleitem/collection/max/id/4457 Statue in the S.W. Park blocks in Portland, Oregon, 1959] | |||
* [http://myweb.msoe.edu/~westr/pdxsouthpark.htm Portland Places: South Park Blocks -- 2. Shemanski Fountain] | * [http://myweb.msoe.edu/~westr/pdxsouthpark.htm Portland Places: South Park Blocks -- 2. Shemanski Fountain] | ||
Revision as of 21:53, 3 December 2011
Located between Main and Salmon is the Shemanski Fountain, given to the city by Joseph Shemanski in 1926 to "express in small measure gratitude for what the city has done for me." Shemanski (1869-1951) was a Polish immigrant who started out as a traveling clock salesman before he founded the Eastern Outfitting Co. and became an extremely successful businessman. The triangular structure of cast Oregon sandstone was designed by Carl L. Linde, a local architect whose work included many fine homes, hotels, and apartments. The fountain includes three small, low drinking basins for dogs.
The original design included a large central planter, but after the fountain was erected, Shemanski felt that a sculpture would better complete the graceful cupola. He commissioned Oliver Laurence Barrett, an art professor at the University of Oregon, to create a bronze statue of Rebecca at the Well. It is not clear why Rebecca was chosen, but as the wife of Isaac in the Old Testament known for her hospitality to strangers and kindness to animals, she was a fitting choice.[1]
External Links
- Statue in the S.W. Park blocks in Portland, Oregon, 1959
- Portland Places: South Park Blocks -- 2. Shemanski Fountain