Tumgik
#billgambrel
philaparkandrec · 8 years
Text
Parks & Playgrounds Named After Black Leaders
In honor of Black History Month, we compiled a list of important African Americans that achieved great feats in their Philadelphia neighborhoods and abroad. As a result, they became namesakes of parks, recreation centers, and playgrounds throughout Philadelphia. Explore our city’s history and learn the background behind the name of several PPR sites. 
Cecil B. Moore
Tumblr media
Cecil Bassett Moore was a prominent figure in Philadelphia’s 1960’s civil rights movement. He studied law at Temple University and was admitted to the bar in 1953. Being at the forefront of the integration movement in the 60’s, his greatest achievements include; encouraging African Americans to picket and protest for the right to join labor unions, desegregating businesses, reinforcing the need for better public education, and encouraging political participation amongst African Americans. In 1963, Cecil B. Moore became the President of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Beginning in 1964, he led protests against Stephen Girard College and was the main attorney on the case. In 1968, the Supreme Court ruled that Girard College had practiced discriminatory admittance procedures, which violated the Fourteenth Amendment. This successfully ended the legal segregation of Girard College. In 1975, Cecil B. Moore was elected to City Council, serving citizens of the North Philadelphia-area until his death. To celebrate Cecil B. Moore’s lasting legacy in Philadelphia, the former “Connie Mack Recreation Center” was renamed “Cecil B. Moore Recreation Center” in September of 1980.
Marian Anderson 
Tumblr media
Marian Anderson was one of the most famous contralto singers of her time. Not only was she known for her musical talent, but she was remembered for the Lincoln Memorial Concert in 1939, which was a significant moment in the Civil Rights movement. Racism halted much of her growth in the beginning of her career, yet she was able to eventually overcome those struggles and become a role model to many people, including many families from her small South Philly neighborhood.
Marian was born in 1897 and grew up less than a block away from the facility now known as “Marian Anderson Recreation Center.” The Union Baptist church, where she began singing at the age of six, was also less than a block away from the center. In 1954, a recreation center was built on the land and rededicated to Marian. Marian returned to South Philly to speak at the rededication ceremony and sign autographs for the families in the community where she grew up. After a long and fruitful life, Marian passed away at the age of 91 in 1993.
Joseph E. Mander Sr. 
Tumblr media
Mander Playground located at 33rd Street and Diamond Street is named after Mr. Joseph E. Mander, Sr. In 1952, Joseph E. Mander, Sr., an African-American male, jumped into the Schuylkill River to rescue a 7-year-old boy named Paul Waxman, who accidentally fell in the river while playing with a toy boat nearby. Mander reached the boy, but could not make the return trip to land with him. Unfortunately, both Mander and the boy drowned. Mander left behind a wife and four children. Because Mander was a black man who died attempting to save a white boy, his heroic efforts shined bright during a time of racial divide in Philadelphia. Today, Mander Playground serves as a gateway into East Fairmount Park and is treasured by the Strawberry Mansion community.  Check out, the East Fairmount Park Spotlight on Joseph E. Mander.
Bill Gambrel
Tumblr media
In 2007, Whitehall Commons Playground was renamed “Bill Gambrel Recreation Center,” after a man that devoted 47 years of coaching and mentoring to at-risk youth in the Frankford section of Philadelphia. He was the first living African American to have a recreation center named in his honor.
In 1967, “Mr. Bill” co-founded the Frankford Chargers, which has grown from a few local kids playing football on a dirt and rock field to eight football teams of over 300 young athletes, cheerleading squads, and a dance team. Over the years, thousands of youth have had the opportunity to play football, and be a part of the community involvement and mentoring provided by Frankford Chargers, due to Mr. Bill’s dedication to the young people in his community.
Mr. Bill passed away on March 4, 2016, leaving behind a better community and many people whose lives he touched. Many of his former athletes have gone on to play football for the NFL, colleges, and high school teams.  
Learn more about Mr. Bill in the memorial written by Art McQuoid, Recreation Leader II at Gambrel Recreation Center
Laura Sims
Tumblr media
In 1998, the former “Cobbs Creek Skate House” was renamed “Laura Sims Skate House,” after the woman who fought for years to build an ice rink in West Philly. After 12 years of petitioning and campaigning, Laura’s persistence was rewarded. In February 1985, the rink opened and was eventually ranked the finest rink in the region by the Philadelphia Flyers. After the opening, Laura formed the “Friends of Cobbs Creek Skate House,” a community group that managed the programs and activities of the rink, including ice skating, ice hockey, sled hockey for the disabled, arts and crafts, after-school tutoring, family gatherings, skating lessons, and more. Laura supervised every activity, cleaned the building, organized the participants, and planted flowers in the outdoor areas. She also organized additional youth classes and senior citizen arts and crafts activities.
Laura was especially proud of the children in her community being able to skate together and form friendships, regardless of racial differences, which broke down stereotypes that existed at that time. Throughout the rest of her life, Laura continued to win the respect and love of her cohorts and earned community awards for her work. After Laura passed away in 1998, the community thought it would be appropriate to rename the ice rink in honor of the remarkable woman.
Julian Abele
Tumblr media
Born in Philadelphia in 1881, Julian Abele attained great acclaim as a talented architectural designer in the United States. Abele was the first African-American student to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Architecture (known today as the Graduate School of Fine Arts) in 1902. He was noted for his contributions to more than 400 buildings, including the Central Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Land Title Building, multiple mansions in and out of Philadelphia, Widener Memorial Library in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and many of the English Gothic and Georgian buildings on the campus of Duke University in North Carolina. 
Abele was truly a remarkable and sophisticated artist. He was versatile in the mediums he used, including watercolor, lithography, etching and pencil in wood, iron, gold, copper, brass and silver. When he was commissioned to design the Art Museum, he traveled to Greece to study classic Greek buildings to adapt the column styles and color of the stone. Using his studies of Greek architecture, he designed the museum’s exterior terrace and front steps, famously celebrated as the “Rocky Steps.”
As a Penn student, he resided in a house on 21st & Fitzwater Streets. Sixty-two years after his death, construction began on a park a few blocks away on 22nd & Carpenter Streets, appropriately named Julian Abele Park in his honor.
Curbed Philly put together this cool map of all the major building and structures designed by Abele while he was in Philly.
Other Playgrounds and Parks Named After African Americans
Lonnie Young Recreation Center (1100 E Chelten Ave., 19138)
Malcolm X Park (5100 Pine St., 19143)
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Recreation Center & Older Adult Center (2101-35 Cecil B. Moore Ave., 19121)
John A. Lee Cultural Center (4310 Haverford Ave., 19104)
Clara Muhammad Square (4700-30 Lancaster Ave., 19131)
Charles H. Chew, Sr. Playground (1800 Washington Ave., 19146)
Eric W. (Hank) Gathers, Jr. Recreation Center (2501-59 Diamond St., 19121)
William Jerome Brown III Playground (1927-41 W Ontario St., 19140)
Robert Wilson III Park (61st St & Baltimore Ave., 19143)
Miles Mack Playground (732-66 N 36th St., 19104) 
Marie Dendy Playground (1501-39 N 10th St., 19122)
Albert W. Christy, Sr. Recreation Center  (728 S 55th St.,19143)
Marshall L. Shepard Recreation Center (5700 Haverford Ave., 19131)
James L. Wright Recreation Center (3320-50 Haverford Ave., 19104)
Daniel E. Rumph II Recreation Center (100-70 E Johnson St., 19144)
John C. Anderson Cultural Center (5323 Overbrook Ave., 19131)
1 note · View note