- City:
- Salt Lake City, UT
- Site Type:
- Parks and Recreation, Civic Facilities, Rock Walls, Picnic and Other Facilities, Landscaping and Tree Planting, Recreation Halls
- New Deal Agencies:
- Works Progress Administration (WPA), Work Relief Programs
- Started:
- 1935
- Completed:
- 1937
- Quality of Information:
- Good
- Marked:
- Yes
- Site Survival:
- Extant
Description
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) helped create the old Forest Dale city park in the Sugarhouse section of southern Salt Lake City UT in 1935-37. The name was later changed to Fairmont Park (the adjoining Forest Dale golf course kept the old name).
The park has been renovated and altered in recent years, especially the addition of a pond create on the little creek that runs through it (a branch of Parlays Creek), new pickleball courts, a skate park and a modern aquatic center. But elements of the WPA-built park remain, including, no doubt, many of the old trees.
At the northeast corner of the park is a stone barbeque fireplace and seating, a park office building in craftsman style with stone pillars, and telling stonework lining the creek alongside it. A stone wall runs the length of the east side of the park, holding up a parking area, and stone pillars mark the formal entrance. There is another such stone entrance gate on the west side of the park at the dead-end of Simpson Avenue and more stone walls at the entrance to the west side parking area.
Both of the old entrance gates have plaques recognizing the WPA’s role, to wit: “Forest Dale Park reclaimed and built by Salt Lake City in cooperation with the Works Progress Administration, 1935-1937.”
Source notes
Plaques at park entrances
Reminiscences of Joan Greer, who played in the park as a child in the 1950s.
Site originally submitted by Joan Greer on July 11, 2021.
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Does anyone know why it was named “Fairmont”?