DLN: Reflections on a fountain

dln logo
Fountain ReturnStaff Photo by Vinny Tennis: Gene Gagliardi, in tan jacket, and his wife, Joan, look at a cast iron fountain they used to own as [Friends of Marshall Square Park] volunteers prepare to unload and return it to Marshall Square Park in West Chester on Monday May 14, 2012. A committee is in the works to have it restored and placed back in the park after it was removed decades ago.

The discovery of a small, long-lost item — say a necklace or a ring — can bring an exclamation of joy.

Think what it’s like to find a fountain.

The Friends of Marshall Square Park are understandably happy. They rediscovered a fountain that used to decorate the West Chester park they advocate.

The fountain went missing decades ago. No one was quite sure when, where or why it went.

Given up for lost after diligent efforts to find clues, plans were in development to recreate the monument.

Old pictures of the Victorian-era fountain show water gently shooting upward and falling into three bowls one after another into a basin surrounded by a small iron fence. The works were located in the middle of the walkway into the park from Matlack and Franklin streets. While certainly not a gigantic edifice, it was grand enough to fit appropriately into the park space developed about it.

Marshall Square is the borough park at the northeast corner of the village business district. When the park was laid out as the borough’s first public square in 1848, the area was pretty swank. (OK, still is. No need to generate unnecessary letters.) The park was named after Chester County botanist Humphry Marshall, world-renowned in the late 18th century for his work classifying plants in the New World. In keeping with the memory of Marshall’s life work, numerous species of shrubs and trees were located in the park. A fountain was a natural addition as time went along.

Times change. After World War II, old, established places like West Chester and old, established park areas like Marshall Square Park seemed very old-fashioned.

Like a lot of things once treasured, the park was taken for granted, passed by, forgotten and neglected.

In our day, the faded beauty of this park was rediscovered by a new generation willing to take up the labor of love needed to restore the botanical life, the walkways, the benches, the ambience.

What ever became of the fountain? The exact details of its removal remain unknown. A good guess — rank speculation actually — is that the fountain became disabled, and it was decided by persons unremembered that it was best to remove it as it had become a useless eyesore.

Perhaps it ended up in the borough public works yard. In West Chester, as in most American communities, a public works yard is a kind of community attic for all sorts of items, some more relevant to the functioning of a public works department than other things — but you never know when something might come in handy. Logic suggests the unwanted pile of metal would eventually disappear from there after being seen by an eye with more imagination.

Disappeared, but recalled by those today who, despite our hurly-burly time, appreciate better the appreciations of a quieter age.

Sleuthing by members of the community tracked the fountain down to a farm in the surrounding countryside. The return of the fountain to the borough should generate words of thanks for the caretaking.

Restoration work remains for both physical fountain and placement in the park. It will no doubt be consuming in time and money. We doubt the people who are involved will begrudge this continuing labor of love. Good luck.

Perhaps there is an aura about. We have a feeling there are several members of Friends of Marshall Square Park who have already muttered to themselves: “This time we don’t lose the fountain.”

That sounds like a good idea.

DLN: “Long-lost Marshall Square Park fountain found”

[Return to Original 1889 Fountain, The Year 2012]

dln logo
Long-lost Marshall Square Park fountain found

By JEREMY GERRARD
jgerrard@dailylocal.com
Posted: 05/15/12 12:01 am
Updated: 05/15/12 07:41 am

fountain return
Staff photo by Vinny Tennis: Gene Gagliardi, wearing a tan jacket, and his wife, Joan, look at the cast iron fountain they used to own while volunteers prepare to return it to Marshall Square Park in West Chester on Monday.

WEST CHESTER — The Marshall Square Park fountain has been returned after its whereabouts stumped residents for more than 60 years.

“We’re thrilled to death, needless to say,” said Anne Walters, vice president of the Friends of Marshall Square Park.

Photographs date the cast iron Victorian fountain before 1906; however, residents recall the fountain disappearing from the park sometime before the mid-1950s.

Rumors throughout the years have led longtime residents to speculate about the tale of the fountain. Some say the borough removed the fountain, only for it to be stolen from its possession; others said they heard the fountain was hauled off as scrap metal for the war effort.

Though the fountain has been returned to its original location, some of its history remains a mystery.

Borough resident Gene Gagliardi said that in the early 1980s, as he was looking for a fountain for his farm in East Bradford, a friend told him about a woman in Cheyney who owned one. Though the owner was reluctant to sell at first, Gagliardi finally bought the fountain for $550. He then took it home, where he painted and restored it to working condition. The fountain turned out to be the original from the park and it stayed at Southdown Farm until this week.

Members of the Friends of Marshall Square Park said they had recently taken up efforts to replace the fountain, hoping at best to get a replica of the original.

“We had given up on the idea of finding this thing,” said Jim Salvas, secretary for the Friends of Marshall Square Park.

After plans to raise money for a replacement had begun, Holly Brown, Borough Council president and member of the park group, said someone had told her Gagliardi might know the location of the original.

Brown spoke with Gagliardi and confirmed the fountain’s location.

Southdown Farm owners Jeff and Mary Veale spoke with Gagliardi and originally agreed to let a group come and look at the fountain before deciding to donate it back to the park.

“We’re not getting a replica; we’re not getting a copy. It’s the real thing,” Walters said.

While the fountain currently rests in many pieces, members of the park group are looking to piece it together and restore it as soon as possible. When the fountain is complete, members said they will hold a dedication ceremony for it.

“This you know … it’s part of history,” Salvas said. “You go to the historical society and you’re going to see this thing over and over again as people gathered around it, kids playing around it. And to bring it back is just amazing.”

Volunteers willing to help with the restoration of the fountain are asked to visit http://www.marshallsquarepark.org.
###

[Return to Original 1889 Fountain, The Year 2012]

OUR LONG-LOST, HISTORIC MSP FOUNTAIN FOUND AND RETURNED

[Return to Original 1889 Fountain, The Year 2012]

Thanks to the efforts of FMSP member and Borough Council President Holly Brown, the original fountain was located last Friday, and its owners agreed to donate it back to the park.

With leadership from Holly over the weekend, yesterday—Monday May 14, 2012—a group* of us went by car caravan to the fountain’s site, loaded it on a truck and brought it home. The dismantled, rusted parts of this beautiful cast iron fountain now rest inside the park’s recently restored 1878 Swiss Cottage.

We have much to do to return the fountain to its former glory at the corner of E. Marshall and N. Franklin Streets—it’s in the header photo above (click for details)—but its return today was a much sought-after accomplishment. We will keep you informed and will be asking for your help with this big project. For now, join us as we celebrate its return.

We were so excited about this, we notified the press. Read the accounts, see photos in the Daily Local News and a video in West Chester Patch.

* Jeff Beitel (FMSP President), Holly Brown (FMSP Executive Committee), Gene and Joan Gagliardi (former fountain owners), Tom McEvoy (FMSP Executive Committee), Bill Mitman and Cathy Wilson (Truck Owners/Drivers), Lane Randall (FMSP Webmaster), Jim Salvas (FMSP Secretary), Anne Walters (FMSP Vice President) and Anne’s son, Travis Walters (the wind beneath our old wings).

[Return to Original 1889 Fountain, The Year 2012]