Public drinking fountains in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, have been built and used since the 19th century. Various reform-minded organizations in the city supported public drinking fountains as street furniture for different but overlapping reasons. One was the general promotion of public health, in an era of poor water and typhoid fever. [1] Leaders of the temperance movement such as the Woman's Christian Temperance Union saw free, clean water as a crucial alternative to beer. Emerging animal welfare organizations, notably the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, wanted to provide water to the dogs and working horses of the city on humanitarian grounds, which is why Philadelphia's drinking fountains of the era often include curb-level troughs that animals could reach. [2]
Philadelphia suffered multiple yellow fever epidemics in the 1790s. The Philadelphia Watering Committee, formally the Joint Committee on Bringing Water to the City, was founded in 1797–98 with the mission of constructing a public water system to combat the disease. [3] Scottish-born architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe, famous for being the architect of the United States Capitol building, designed the Philadelphia system in which an underground brick aqueduct carried drinking water from the Schuylkill River to Centre Square, now the site of Philadelphia City Hall. There, twin steam pumps propelled the water into a tank in the tower of the pumping house, from which gravity distributed it throughout the city via wooden water mains (cored logs). Completed in January 1801, this was the first citywide gravity-fed public water system in the United States. [4] [5]
Latrobe's chief draftsman, Frederick Graff, designed a T-shaped wooden fire hydrant in 1802, that featured "a drinking fountain on one side and a 4-1/2-inch water main on the other." [6] The hydrants were installed along every major street of the city. [6]
Latrobe's Greek Revival pumping house and the gardens surrounding it became a major attraction. [7] Graff was promoted to manager of the Water Works in 1805, and designed the fountain for Centre Square. [8] The Watering Committee commissioned sculptor William Rush to create a statue, Allegory of the Schuylkill River, to be its centerpiece. [9] Better known as Water Nymph with Bittern, it was carved from pine and painted white (in imitation of marble). The first public fountain in Philadelphia was unveiled in August 1809. [10]
The idea of purpose-built drinking fountains was relatively novel. The first public drinking fountains in England appeared in Liverpool in 1854, through the efforts of Charles Pierre Melly, and that city had 43 in total by 1858. [11] The first in London was a granite basin attached to the gates of St Sepulchre-without-Newgate, funded by Samuel Gurney and his Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association in 1859. [12]
A spring-fed public drinking fountain was erected in 1854, along the Wissahickon Creek opposite Chestnut Hill. [13] It was described in 1884 as:
The first fountain, so called, stands upon the side of the road on the west side of the Wissahickon ... It is claimed that this is the first drinking fountain erected in the county of Philadelphia outside of the Fairmount Water-Works. A clear, cold, mountain spring is carried by a spout, covered with a lion's head, from a niche in a granite front, with pilasters and pediment into a marble basin. The construction bears the date 1854 ... Upon a slab above the niche are cut the words "Pro bono publico"; beneath the basin these, "Esto perpetua". [14]
In the 1860s, philanthropic groups and governments across the United States began to fund the building of water fountains, including the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in 1867 (in Union Square in New York City), and the Philadelphia Fountain Society beginning in April 1869. [15] New fountains in Philadelphia proved immediately successful. They quickly proved their "utility and absolute necessity;" by September 1869 the Fountain Society had constructed 12, and the Pennsylvania branch of the ASPCA (PSPCA) had built another 5. [16] As of 1880, the Philadelphia Fountain Society recorded 50 fountains serving approximately 3 million people and 1 million horses and other animals. [2] Reformers continued installing such fountains throughout Philadelphia into the 1940s. Many remain. [2]
In 2015, Philly Voice reported on plans to re-establish a system of public drinking fountains in the city. [17]
The earliest and most prolific fountain-building organization was the Philadelphia Fountain Society, headed by medical doctor and art collector Wilson Cary Swann (1806–1876) and formally incorporated on April 21, 1869, [18] with the stated mission of developing water fountains and water troughs for Philadelphia. [19] [20] [21] "[O]ur object", wrote Swann, "is the erection and maintenance in this city of public drinking fountains for the health and refreshment of the people of Philadelphia and the benefit of dumb animals". [22]
The society hoped that water fountains would directly improve quality-of-life for workers and working animals in the city, and indirectly promote temperance; [23] [24] Swann felt that "the lack of water for workers and animals led to intemperance and crime", and that drinking fountains positioned around the city would help "workers quench their thirst in public instead of entering local taverns". [25] Some of Swann's arguments may have been derived from the like-minded London Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association, established in 1859. [21]
The fountains themselves were intended to be more functional than decorative, although many of them incorporate work by significant architects and sculptors. [21] The society reached out to Philadelphians, advertising $5 for an annual membership, or $150 for a lifetime membership. [21]
The society's first fountain went up in April 1869, [21] adjacent to Washington Square, at 7th and Walnut Streets. [26] A cast iron eagle perched on top, and below the plaque were two troughs, one for horses, one for dogs. [27] (It was relocated to the south side of the square in 1916.) [21] That same year, work began on two fountains for the 500 block of Chestnut Street, in front of Independence Hall. [21] Prominent citizens such as John Wanamaker and Anthony Joseph Drexel provided funding to the society, and by July there were five operational fountains. [21] Two years later, forty three fountains were managed by the society. [21] The society installed three fountains on Rittenhouse Square, the first outside the iron fence at the square's northwest corner; the others within the iron fence at its northeast and southeast corners. [28] Persistent flooding around the fountains created a nuisance, and the society removed them by 1884. [lower-alpha 1]
Swann handled a large portion of the society's work, and by 1874 it had erected 73 fountains. [22] [29] [19] On April 17, 1874, Adelaide Neilson performed a concert to benefit the society at the Academy of Music. [30]
The society had challenges. While rapidly constructing new fountains, it struggled to fund ongoing maintenance. In the 1870s, the city budgeted some money for upkeep, but that practice was ended by 1880. [21] The city was hard on its drinking fountains. That first fountain at 7th and Walnut, which was "at all times surrounded by a thirsty crowd" as of 1896, had its iron eagle "blown over" to land on a boy and break his arm, resulting in civil damages, then its fortified replacement eagle was squarely broken off by a tree branch. [31]
The destruction of fountains by boys and men with vandalistic tendencies, has to be constantly watched for and guarded against. Truck drivers and dragmen with heavy wagons also, by their carelessness, damage the fountains, and it is no uncommon thing for a fountain to be entirely knocked over by the pole of a brewery wagon ... the majority of the fountains ... erected now-a-days, are built low down, below the range of a wagon pole. [31]
Swann died in 1876. By 1892, the number of fountains managed by the society had declined to 60. That year, Swann's wife died and left $80,000 to the society, as well as $25,000 for the construction of a fountain in his memory. [22] [19] By 1910, the number of horses in Philadelphia was decreasing as automobiles and streetcars gained in popularity, decreasing the need for fountains. [21] After the completion of its last grand project, the Swann Memorial Fountain in Logan Circle in 1924, the society ceased building fountains. [32] At its peak, the society had managed 82 fountains. [2] It still exists as a grant-providing organisation. [21]
The Fountain Society was linked to the Pennsylvania branch of the newly formed American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, co-founded in June 1868 by Colonel Mark Richards Muckle of the Public Ledger . [21] The two had shared motivations, and Swann was involved in both. [33] As of September 1869, press reports claimed "a very commendable rivalry in the erection of drinking fountains for man and beast will spring up between those two admirable associations", the Fountain Society with twelve in operation so far, and the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PSPCA) credited with five, all fountains which had "proven their utility and absolute necessity" with more to come. [16] Some of these featured a curb-level trough for small animals, and a separate drinking fountain for people. [21]
By 1869, the activist Caroline Earle White had grown frustrated with her exclusion from any decision-making role in the PSPCA, which she had helped to found. She created a Women's Branch, essentially an auxiliary, [34] which also independently commissioned the construction of public drinking fountains and horse troughs. [35] [36] White founded the American Anti-Vivisection Society in Philadelphia in 1883. She created its monthly magazine, Journal of Zoöphily, in 1892, and worked as editor for 25 years. [37]
White fully broke away from the PSPCA in 1899, founding the independent Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or WPSPCA. [19] [38] The WPSPCA became co-publisher of Journal of Zoöphily, which promoted its good works. [37] White was assisted by the efforts and financial support of the WPSPCA's vice-president, Annie L. Lowry, the childless widow of a successful Philadelphia lawyer. Lowry sponsored horse fountains at Walnut & Dock Streets and 8th & Porter Streets, and more were erected in her memory. Lowry made $58,000 in bequests to the WPSPCA in her 1908 will, including $10,000 "for erecting fountains in Philadelphia for horses and smaller animals," [39] and $20,000 to establish the first animal shelter in the United States. [34]
A crusade is being conducted in Philadelphia, and has been for six years past, by the members of the Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
In 1906, Mrs. Bradbury Bedell, a member of the Women's Society who had long been active in seeking better conditions for animals in Philadelphia, and the late Mrs. A. L. Lowry, another woman who for years had sought successfully to aid in the comfort of the dumb beasts, debated over the filthiness of many of the water troughs located around the city. They made personal appeals in many cases to saloon keepers where they found trough conditions especially flagrant. Sometimes their efforts were successful, and again the women's appeals were passed by unnoticed.
Then the thought came to them that the society could in time establish sufficient stations to crush out the horse trough evil, and the campaign was started. In six years the results have been even more than the originators had anticipated. To-day the society owns forty fountains and troughs throughout the city. Conditions at many other fountains have been greatly improved, and horse owners have been aroused to the danger.The city authorities have cheerfully aided the Women's Society here by furnishing the supply of water free for all the stations and in other ways. Many heads of stores and establishments which have a large supply of horses have also responded to the society's efforts on behalf of the horse. They know what it means from a commercial as well as a humane standpoint. [40]
As of 1928 the WPSPCA still ran a veterinary hospital in the city, an animal refuge, owned and maintained 50 street fountains open all year, and put up additional seasonal horse-watering stations in the city from May through November. [41]
During the season from April to November [the fountains] are so constantly patronized in busy portions of the city that water is at all times spilt over the surrounding pavement [...] – The Times , October 9, 1892 [22]
The Woman's Christian Temperance Union also commissioned fountains.
The local membership of the Sons of Temperance funded a drinking fountain, originally installed under a pergola at the 1876 Centennial Exposition and later moved to Independence Square in 1877. [42] As advertised, it provided ICE WATER FREE TO ALL. [43]
Also for the 1876 exposition the German-American sculptor Herman Kirn produced the elaborate Catholic Total Abstinence Union Fountain. This included five figures, Moses in the middle, and sixteen drinking fountains installed into granite pedestals. [44]
Some entries in this table overlap the entries in Drinking fountains in the United States. Neither table is an exhaustive list.
Name | Date | Image | Location | Sponsor/Designer | Material | Notes | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"First Fountain" | 1854 | Forbidden Drive, Wissahickon Valley (between Wises Mill Road & Bells Mill Road) | John Cook and Charles Magargé | white marble | Interpretive panel beside the "First Fountain": "Half a mile above Valley Green is a marble drinking fountain, erected in 1854—the first built in Philadelphia. It is supplied from a mountain spring, and the water is clear and cold. … John Cook and Charles Magargé presented this fountain to the Park Commission for public use." Sealed in 1957 because of water pollution | [45] [46] | |
Peace Fountain | 1865 | Fairmount Water Works, South Garden (west of Philadelphia Museum of Art) | brownstone | Peace Fountain, c.1870: A wall fountain set against a granite cliff. The inscription, "Peace June 1865," refers to the month in which the last fighting of the Civil War ended (in Texas). | [47] [48] [49] | ||
Washington Square Fountain | 1869 | | Original: 7th & Walnut Streets (north side of Washington Square) Current: 615 S. Washington Square (south side of Washington Square) | Philadelphia Fountain Society | granite | Installed along the square's north side, 1869: "Outside the railing of this square, on a line with Seventh Street is a stone fountain surmounted by an eagle standing on a globe, which is noteworthy as being the first of these benevolent structures in providing which the Philadelphia Fountain Society has already earned the gratitude of thousands of thirsty men and suffering beasts." Relocated to the square's south side, 1916 Listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places | [50] [21] |
Tyler Memorial Fountain Horse Trough at 312 Arch Street | 1869 | | Original: 500 block of Chestnut Street (in front of Independence Hall) Current: 312 Arch Street (in front of Arch Street Friends Meeting House) | Philadelphia Fountain Society | granite | Two PFS fountains were installed on Chestnut Street in front of Independence Hall, 1869. One was sponsored by Mrs. F. Tyler, the other by merchant John Wanamaker. "The State-House pumps were very near, if not exactly, upon the spot where fountains, surmounted by vases and intended to be decorated by flowers or shrubbery, were afterward placed by the Philadelphia Fountain Society." The Wanamaker fountain was hit by a car in the 1940s, and removed. The Tyler fountain was relocated to 312 Arch Street, 1942 Listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places | [50] [51] [21] |
Lemon Hill Spring (Marble Drinking Fountain) (Lion's Head Fountain) | circa 1870 | Kelly Drive & Sedgeley Drive, East Fairmount Park | white marble | In the background (left) of the Lincoln Monument (1871): In 2020: | [52] | ||
In Aqua Sanitas Fountain | 1870–1871 | Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, West Fairmount Park (south of Falls Bridge) | granite | Inscription: "In Aqua Sanitas" ("In Water Health") "Drinking fountain and water trough, west side of West River drive, just south of Falls Bridge." | [53] [52] | ||
Horse trough | 1870–1871 | Martin Luther King Jr. Drive & Montgomery Drive, West Fairmount Park | granite | "Drinking fountain and water trough, west side of West River drive, just south of Columbia Bridge." No inscription; drinking fountain removed | [52] | ||
Catholic Total Abstinence Union Fountain | 1874–1877 | | Fountain Drive, West Fairmount Park (west of Belmont Avenue) | Catholic Total Abstinence Union Herman Kirn, designer and sculptor | granite | Erected on the fairgrounds of the 1876 Centennial Exposition, and dedicated July 4, 1876. Cost: $60,000 16 drinking fountains—located on the four granite pedestals of the subordinate statues. Water was supplied from a reservoir atop Georges Hill. Georges Hill Reservoir is now the site of the Mann Music Center. | [54] [55] [56] |
Temperance Fountain | 1876 | Original: 1876 Centennial Exposition fairgrounds Current: in storage | Grand Division of the Sons of Temperance | cast iron | Installed under a 13-sided gazebo at the 1876 Centennial Exposition. Cost: $2,300. "At the close of the Centennial, the Sons of Temperance removed the fountain to Independence Square, where they supply it with ice at their own cost from June to October every year." Installed outside Independence Hall, 1877–1969. Placed in storage, 1969 | [57] [58] | |
Lion's Head Fountain | 1878 | Original: Lincoln Drive, Wissahickon Valley Current: Kelly Drive, East Fairmount Park (south of Strawberry Mansion Bridge) | Fairmount Park Art Association Mrs. Richard Davis Wood, donor | granite | In its original location, c.1895. Note the metal cup chained to the fountain: Relocated to Kelly Drive, year | [59] [60] | |
Ancient Roman Sarcophagus Kates Horse Trough | c.200–225 A.D. 1879 | Forbidden Drive (west of intersection with Lincoln Drive) | Fairmount Park Art Association Clarence S. Kates, donor | Italian white marble | Detail: Woman Riding a Sea-Centaur: A highly-carved ancient Roman sarcophagus, repurposed as a horse trough, and installed at MacFarland Spring, 1879. Destroyed by vandalism. Original dimensions: H. 28 in (71 cm) x W. 69 in (180 cm) x D. 26 in (66 cm) Dr. Donald White, of the University of Pennsylvania, dates it to "the first quarter of the 3rd century AD." "HORSE TROUGH. Presented by Clarence S. Kates. Accepted by the Commissioners of Fairmount Park, December 15th, 1878, and placed on the Wissahickon Drive, near the site of the Old Log Cabin." | [61] [59] [62] | |
Orestes and Pylades Fountain | 1884 | 33rd Street & Reservoir Drive, East Fairmount Park (Oxford Street Entrance) | Fairmount Park Art Association Carl Johann Steinhäuser, sculptor (original marble) Herman Kirn, designer | bronze & granite | Steinhäuser's 1871 marble sculpture is located in the Palace Park, Karlsruhe, Germany. Kirn owned his late teacher's plaster model, from which this was cast in bronze. "Cast by Bureau Brothers, Philadelphia. Mounted on a pedestal of Richmond granite, with streams of water pouring from four bronze masks. Placed near Columbia Avenue Entrance to the East Park, south of the great Receiving Reservoir, in September, 1884." | [61] [63] [64] [65] | |
Catharine Thorn Memorial Fountain | 1890 | 23rd Street, South Street & Grays Ferry Avenue | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Inscription: "The Legacy of Catharine Thorn by the W. P. S. P. C. A." Funded with $1000 Thorn left to the Society in her will. Installed at the center of a paved plaza bounded by South Street, 23rd Street and Grays Ferry Avenue. Now the center of a triangular pocket park | [66] [67] [lower-alpha 2] | |
Forepaugh Horse Trough | 1895 | Fairhill Square, 4th Street & Lehigh Avenue | Philadelphia Fountain Society M. H. Gregg, maker | granite | Inscription: "Presented to the Philadelphia Fountain Society by a Lady" Maker's mark: | [2] | |
William Leonidas Springs Fountain | 1899 | Lincoln Drive, Wissahickon Valley (between Gypsy Lane & Forbidden Drive) | Jeanette S. Springs, donor | granite | "In October, 1899, a granite fountain was erected on the Wissahickon Drive at the Old Log Cabin spring by Miss Jeanette S. Springs, in memory of her father, William Leonidas Springs." An exedra, with a pedimented wall fountain and horse trough at center and a drinking fountain at each end. Sealed in the 1940s because of water pollution | [69] [70] | |
Class of 1892 Drinking Fountain The Scholar and the Football Player | 1900 | Quadrangle Dormitories University of Pennsylvania 37th & Spruce Streets | University of Pennsylvania Class of 1892, sponsor Alexander Stirling Calder, designer and sculptor | bronze & granite | Bronze; result of a $2500 fund raised by alumni; "the student appears in cap and gown, while, seated at his side, is the athlete, in football armor and with a 'pigskin' held firmly in his arm." Located under the North Arcade, between the Memorial Tower and the North Steps | [71] [72] | |
Grace and Beauty Fountain | c.1901 | Horticultural Center, West Fairmount Park | white marble | ||||
Bell H. Crump Fountain [lower-alpha 3] | 1907 | Original: Broad Street, Fairmount Avenue & Ridge Avenue Current: 350 E. Erie Avenue | Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Installed at the intersection of Broad Street, Fairmount Avenue, and Ridge Avenue, 1907 (opposite the Divine Lorraine Hotel) Inscription: "Erected by Bell H. Crump 1907" Relocated 1954 [lower-alpha 4] Now installed in front of the Pennsylvania SPCA Philadelphia Veterinary Clinic: | [2] [74] | |
Mary Rebecca Darby Smith Memorial Fountain Rebecca at the Well | 1908 | | Original: 12th & Spring Garden Streets (on median strip) Current: Horticultural Drive, West Fairmount Park | Philadelphia Fountain Society John J. Boyle, sculptor | bronze & red granite | Funded with $5000 left to the Society by Smith, and based on her own design Inscription: "Drink and I will give thy camels drink also" Installed at 12th & Spring Garden Streets, 1908 Removed and placed in storage, 1922 Installed in West Fairmount Park, 1934 | [2] [31] |
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Fountain | 1909 | 3rd & Bainbridge Streets (on median strip) | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan's Marble & Granite Works, 3805-7 Woodland Ave., Phila., maker | granite | Erected at a cost of $1,500, with money left in Lowry's will. [39] Inscriptions: "Drink Gentle Friends." "In Memory of Annie L. Lowry 1910." "W. P. S. P. C. A." Dedicated by Caroline Earle White on May 12, 1909 Listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places | [75] [50] [lower-alpha 5] | |
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Horse Trough | 1910 | Original: Fairmount Avenue & 21st Street? Current: 147 N. 2nd Street (in front of Fireman's Hall Museum) | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan's Marble & Granite Works, 3805-7 Woodland Ave., Phila., maker | granite | Inscription: "The Gift of Mrs. A. L. Lowry." Relocated to Engine Company #8, 2nd & Quarry Streets. The former firehouse is now the Fireman's Hall Museum: Listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places | [50] [2] [76] | |
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Horse Trough | 1910 | Original: 69th Street Terminal? Current: Ridge Avenue & Fountain Street (in front of Roxborough High School) | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan's Marble & Granite Works, 3805-7 Woodland Ave., Phila., maker | granite | Inscription: "In Memory of Mrs. Annie L. Lowry. Women's Pa. S. P. C. A." | [2] [76] | |
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Horse Trough | 1910 | Original: Newtown Square? Current: Women's Animal Center, 3839 Richlieu Road, Bensalem | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan's Marble & Granite Works, 3805-7 Woodland Ave., Phila., maker | granite | Relocated to E. Logan Street, east of Stenton Avenue, when? Relocated to Women's Animal Center, 2019 | [76] [77] | |
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Horse Trough | 1910 | Original: Lansdowne? [lower-alpha 6] Current: Nitre Hall, 1682 Karakung Drive, Haverford | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan's Marble & Granite Works, 3805-7 Woodland Ave., Phila., maker | granite | Inscription: In Memory of Mrs. Annie L. Lowry Women's Pa. S. P. C. A. Unveiled November 28, 1910 Relocated from Burmont & Glendale Roads to Powder Mill Valley Park, 1973 Relocated to grounds of Nitre Hall, 2019 | [76] [79] [78] | |
Edward Wetherill Memorial Fountain Horse Trough at 315 S 9th St | circa 1910 | 315 S. 9th Street (north of Pine Street) | Philadelphia Fountain Society | granite | Inscription: "A merciful man is merciful to his beast" (front) Inscription: "Edward Wetherill 1821 — 1908" (rear, in niche) Listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places | [50] [80] [21] | |
John Harrison Memorial Fountain | circa 1910 | Kelly Drive, East Fairmount Park (south of Fountain Green Drive) | limestone | Inscription: "In memory of John Harrison 1834 — 1909" "The Harrison Memorial Lithia Spring and Water Trough" | [2] [52] | ||
Annie L. Lowry Memorial Horse Trough | 1913 | Aldan Borough | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals John Sheehan? | granite | Inscription: "Del. Co. S. P. C. A." | [79] | |
Harriett S. French Fountain | 1914 | Belmont Avenue, West Fairmount Park (north of Montgomery Drive) | Women's Christian Temperance Union | granite | Inscriptions: "Harriet S. French, M.D." (street side); "W. C. T. U." (sidewalk side) "Harriet S. French Fountain, east side of Belmont avenue, about 50 yards north of Belmont [Montgomery] drive." Dr. Harriet Schneider French was president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union of Philadelphia. | [52] [81] | |
Lion's Head Drinking Fountain (Penn Museum) | circa 1915 | University of Pennsylvania Museum (South Street sidewalk) 33rd & South Streets | Alexander Stirling Calder, sculptor | white marble & granite | In foreground, below the entrance steps: | [82] | |
J. William White Memorial Drinking Fountain | 1921 | Rittenhouse Square (Walnut Street, between 18th & 19th Streets) | Rittenhouse Square Flower Market Association Paul Philippe Cret, architect R. Tait McKenzie, sculptor | limestone & bronze | Dr. J. William White was a prominent surgeon and professor at the University of Pennsylvania. | [83] | |
Sarah Cresson Memorial Horse Trough | 1922 | Original: Front Street & Erie Avenue Current: 3rd & Spring Garden Streets (NE corner) | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Cresson bequeathed funds to the Women's PSPCA for three horse troughs, all installed in 1922. | [2] [84] | |
Sarah Cresson Memorial Horse Trough | 1922 | Broad Street, Oregon Avenue & Moyamensing Avenue | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Inscription: "In Memoriam Sarah Cresson 1922" Installed on a traffic island, north of Marconi Plaza | [85] | |
Sarah Cresson Memorial Horse Trough | 1922 | NE corner Windrim Avenue & Broad Street | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Inscription: "In Memoriam Sarah Cresson 1922" This originally may have been installed on the adjacent traffic island, formed by Broad Street, Windrim Avenue and Ruscomb Street. | ||
Two Standing Birds Fountain (Penn Museum) | circa 1926–1929 | University of Pennsylvania Museum (East Courtyard) 33rd & South Streets | Alexander Stirling Calder, sculptor Day & Klauder, architects | white marble | [86] [87] [88] | ||
Lemon Hill Pet Fountain | Sedgeley Drive, East Fairmount Park (north of Kelly Drive, beside Goldfish Pond Fountain) | granite | Inscription: "John IV. 13. Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again" |
Name | Date | Image | Location | Designer/Sponsor | Material | Notes | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Iron Spring Fountain (Mineral Spring) | 1871 | Sedgeley Drive, east of Lemon Hill | cast iron | [89] | |||
Sedgeley Drinking Fountain | 1871 | Sedgeley Guard House | cast iron | [89] | |||
Rittenhouse Square Fountain | 1872 | 19th & Walnut Streets (NW corner Rittenhouse Square, outside iron fence) | Philadelphia Fountain Society | cast iron | Removed by 1884 Church of the Holy Trinity later sponsored a drinking fountain, possibly at this site. | [90] [22] | |
Mercury Fountain | 1872 | 18th & Walnut Streets (NE corner Rittenhouse Square, inside iron fence) | Philadelphia Fountain Society J. Gillingham Fell, donor | cast iron | Cost: $3,500 Relocated to 42nd Street & Woodland Avenue, by 1884. No longer at that location. | [28] [14] [90] [22] | |
Danaide Fountain | 1872 | 18th & Locust Streets (SE corner Rittenhouse Square, inside iron fence) | Philadelphia Fountain Society | cast iron | The fountain's four corbels each supported a (zinc?) figure of Theodor Kalide's Boy with Swan. Removed by 1884 | [28] [91] [90] [92] | |
5 French drinking fountains | 1878 | East Fairmount Park | Fairmount Park Art Association | bronzed cast iron | "FIVE FOUNTAINS.* Cast at Paris, France, at the Foundry of Val D'Osne. Purchased by the Association, and erected with basins, hydraulic fitments, etc., at the expense of the Association, in the Park near the Lincoln Monument. Accepted by the Commissioners of Fairmount Park, December 8th, 1877. * Two have been placed near East River Drive below Girard Avenue Bridge." All 5 drinking fountains were still in use in 1915. | [61] [52] | |
Norris Square Fountain | 1891 | Susquehanna Avenue (between Hancock Street & Howard Street) | Women's Christian Temperance Union | Inscriptions: "I will give unto him that is athirst of the Water of Life freely." "Erected by the Sixth Young Women's Christian Temperance Union, July, 1891." | [22] | ||
Annie L. Lowry Fountain | 1906 | John S. James Memorial Episcopal Church, 8th & Porter Streets | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | Dedicated July 1, 1906 Church now demolished | [93] | ||
Annie L. Lowry Fountain | 1906 | Dock & Walnut Streets | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | Barre granite | Dedicated October 22, 1906 | [94] | |
Harriett S. French Memorial Fountain | 1909 | Grays Ferry Avenue, 25th Street & Christian Street (opposite Philadelphia Naval Asylum) | Women's Christian Temperance Union | granite | Inscription: "Erected to the glory of God, by the Harriet S. French Young Women's Christian Temperance Union and the Loyal Temperance Legion of Holy Trinity Memorial chapel" "The fountain is 8 feet 4 inches high, and has bowls for both horses and dogs, and is provided with an ample ice reservoir, which will be kept full by the Union and school." | [95] | |
Archbishop Ryan Memorial Watering Station | 1911 | NE corner Broad & Arch Streets | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | Dedicated June 6, 1911 Funded by a bequest from Annie L. Lowry In operation seasonally, from June to September. Attendants brought individual pails of water to the horses (to discourage the spread of glanders). Featured a drive-thru shower for cooling the horses. | [96] | ||
Martin Hetzel Memorial Fountain | 1915 | Lehigh Avenue & Waterloo Street | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Dedicated September 1, 1915 | [97] | |
Emmeline Reed Bedell Memorial Fountain | 1920 | Dock Street and Delaware Avenue | Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals | granite | Bedell was "founder of the Auxiliary, and who twenty-five years ago established the first public watering places in this city. It bears the inscription, "In Memory of Emmeline Reed Bedell, 1920," carved in the granite at the base." | [98] |
Fairmount Park is the largest municipal park in Philadelphia and the historic name for a group of parks located throughout the city. Fairmount Park consists of two park sections named East Park and West Park, divided by the Schuylkill River, with the two sections together totalling 2,052 acres (830 ha). Management of Fairmount Park and the entire citywide park system is overseen by Philadelphia Parks & Recreation, a city department created in 2010 from the merger of the Fairmount Park Commission and the Department of Recreation.
A drinking fountain, also called a water fountain or water bubbler, is a fountain designed to provide drinking water. It consists of a basin with either continuously running water or a tap. The drinker bends down to the stream of water and swallows water directly from the stream. Modern indoor drinking fountains may incorporate filters to remove impurities from the water and chillers to lower its temperature. Drinking fountains are usually found in public places, like schools, rest areas, libraries, and grocery stores.
Logan Circle, also known as Logan Square, is an open-space park in Center City Philadelphia's northwest quadrant and one of the five original planned squares laid out on the city grid. The centerpiece of the park is the Logan Circle, a circular area centered on a large water feature, bounded by a traffic circle carrying 19th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway with connections to 18th and 20th streets to the east and west and Race and Vine Streets to the south and north.
The Swann Memorial Fountain is an art deco fountain sculpture located in the center of Logan Circle in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
The Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association is an association that was set up in London by Samuel Gurney, a member of Parliament and philanthropist, and Edward Thomas Wakefield, a barrister, in 1859 to provide free drinking water.
The Temperance Fountain is a fountain and statue located in Washington, D.C., donated to the city in 1882 by Henry D. Cogswell, a dentist from San Francisco, California, who was a crusader in the temperance movement. This fountain was one of a series of temperance fountains he designed and commissioned in a belief that easy access to cool drinking water would keep people from consuming alcoholic beverages.
A watering trough is a man-made or natural receptacle intended to provide drinking water to animals, livestock on farms or ranches or wild animals.
A temperance fountain was a fountain that was set up, usually by a private benefactor, to encourage temperance, and to make abstinence from beer possible by the provision of clean, safe, and free water. Beer was the main alternative to water, and generally safer. The temperance societies had no real alternative as tea and coffee were too expensive, so drinking fountains were very attractive.
Union Fire Company, sometimes called Franklin's Bucket Brigade, was a volunteer fire department formed in Philadelphia in 1736 with the assistance of Benjamin Franklin. It was the first firefighting organization in Philadelphia, although it was followed within the year by establishment of the Fellowship Fire Company. The fire company was formed on 7 December 1736 after a series of publications in the Pennsylvania Gazette by Franklin and others pointing out the need for more effective handling of fires in Philadelphia and remained active until approximately 1820. Although modeled after the Mutual Fire Societies of Franklin's native Boston, the Union Fire Company protected all members of the community rather than only the members of the company.
Sedgeley was a mansion, designed by the architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe, and built on the east banks of the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, USA, in 1799–1802.
Spring Garden Street Bridge is a highway bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It crosses the Schuylkill River below Fairmount Dam and connects West Philadelphia to the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Benjamin Franklin Parkway. It is the fourth bridge at this location.
Fairmount Rowing Association is an amateur rowing club, founded in 1877. The facility, located at #2 Boathouse Row in the historic Boathouse Row of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is on the National Register of Historic Places. Fairmount originally catered to blue-collar youths living in the Fairmount neighborhood. In 1916, after decades of being rejected, the club was finally allowed to join the Schuylkill Navy. The Club boasts being known as the "premiere club for Masters rowing in the mid-Atlantic region" and has produced several world class rowers.
Frederick Graff was an American hydraulic engineer who designed and built the Fairmount Water Works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and unofficially invented the fire hydrant.
Caroline White was an American philanthropist and anti-vivisection activist. She co-founded the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PSPCA) in 1867, founded its women's branch (WPSPCA) in 1869, and founded the American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS) in 1883.
Lincoln Monument (Philadelphia) is a monument honoring Abraham Lincoln in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. One of the first initiated in memory of the assassinated president, the monument was designed by neoclassical sculptor Randolph Rogers and completed in 1871. It is now located northeast of the intersection of Kelly Drive and Sedgley Drive, opposite Boathouse Row.
This is a history and list of drinking fountains in the United States. A drinking fountain, also called a water fountain or bubbler, is a fountain designed to provide drinking water. It consists of a basin with either continuously running water or a tap. The drinker bends down to the stream of water and swallows water directly from the stream. Drinking water fountains are most commonly found in heavy usage areas like public amenities, schools, airports, and museums.
The Catholic Total Abstinence Union Fountain (1874–1877) – also known as The Catholic Total Abstinence Centennial Fountain or The Centennial Fountain – is a now-defunct ornamental fountain and drinking fountain located in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Created as an attraction for the 1876 Centennial Exposition, it was commissioned by the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America, a religious organization that advocated for total abstinence from alcohol.
The Alexander von Humboldt statue is a monumental statue of Alexander von Humboldt in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Located in Fairmount Park, the statue was completed in 1871 and donated to the city in 1876.
Wilson Cary Swann was an American physician, philanthropist, and social reformer. Born in present-day Alexandria, Virginia, he moved to Philadelphia in 1847, and spent the rest of his life there. Swann held around 40 slaves, whom he freed shortly after his marriage in 1847.
Mary Frances Lovell (1843–1932) was a British-born American writer, humanitarian, and temperance reformer. She co-founded the American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS), and also, in 1859, the Women's Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (WPSPCA), serving as the latter's corresponding secretary and honorary president. She served as vice-president of the American Humane Association and through her work with the World Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), her humanitarian efforts were introduced into some 20 countries around the world.