Morningside Park

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Carl Schurz statue at Morningside Park.
Carl Schurz statue at Morningside Park.
Alternate use: Morningside Park, Los Angeles, California, a neighborhood in South Los Angeles

Morningside Park is a New York City public park in northern portion of the New York City borough of Manhattan. The 30-acre area occupies 110th to 123rd Streets from Manhattan Avenue to Morningside Drive at the border between Harlem and Morningside Heights. Its distinctive natural geography is a rugged cliff of Manhattan schist rock. The park came into existence as a cost-saving measure to avoid the expense of extending the street grid across difficult terrain.

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The park owes much of its design to Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux. Twentieth century additions include playgrounds, basketball courts, and softball diamonds. Other features include:

Columbia University buildings on Morningside Drive overlooking Morningside Park
Columbia University buildings on Morningside Drive overlooking Morningside Park

Morningside Park was the focus of the famous 1968 student protests at nearby Columbia University. The university planned to build a gymnasium on the park as a joint project with the city. Protesters believed the planned separate east and west entrances amounted to an attempt to circumvent recent federal law that banned racially segregated facilities. The distinctive local geography and demographics would have opened one end of the gymnasium to African-American Harlem residents and opened the other end to the predominantly white university. University administration under Grayson Kirk denied that this reflected racial bias and stressed that greater park services would benefit the Harlem community. The university abandoned the plan after students occupied administration and classroom buildings and shut down the university for several weeks.

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