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Rockford Park

Rockford Park
Sam DuPont.JPG
Admiral Samuel DuPont statue and Rockford Tower, Rockford Park, March 2010
Rockford Park is located in Delaware
Rockford Park
Rockford Park is located in the US
Rockford Park
Location Roughly bounded by Red Oak and Rockford Rds., Church and Rising Sun Lanes, and the Brandywine River, Wilmington, Delaware
Coordinates 39°46′00″N 75°34′18″W / 39.76667°N 75.57167°W / 39.76667; -75.57167Coordinates: 39°46′00″N 75°34′18″W / 39.76667°N 75.57167°W / 39.76667; -75.57167
Area 104 acres (42 ha)
Built 1889 (1889)
NRHP Reference # 78000912
Added to NRHP September 20, 1978

Rockford Park is a historic public park located in a residential area of Wilmington, New Castle County, Delaware. It is characterized by a large, grassy meadow which slopes gently upward to a large knoll overlooking the Brandywine River.

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. The park is a unit of Delaware's Wilmington State Parks.

Rockford is one of the oldest parks in the city of Wilmington. It was originally conceived by philanthropist and conservationist William Poole Bancroft, who played an instrumental role in the creation of other city, state, and federal parks in Delaware (such as First State National Historical Park). Bancroft was one of the primary sponsors behind the Delaware legislature's creation of the Board of Park Commissioners in 1883, and he served on the Board from its inception until 1922. He owned the land that houses Rockford Park today, and offered to donate it for park land at the very first meeting of the Board of Park Commissioners. At the recommendation of Frederick Law Olmsted, the Board instead focused first on establishing the nearby Brandywine Park. Once that was done, Olmsted visited Bancroft's Rockford land in 1889 and issued a positive report to the Board recommending accepting the land and establishing the park. Later in 1889, Bancroft donated 59 acres of his property to form Rockford Park, and he convinced the du Pont family to donate an additional 9 acres of land.

In 1901, a 75 foot stone building named Rockford Tower was constructed to serve two purposes, as both a water tower and an observation tower. It contains a steel cylinder water tank, surrounded by a staircase which leads to the highest level of the tower. On the highest level, large stone arches allow for a view of the park and the Brandywine River below.

There are three notable memorials in Rockford Park.

The first is Canby Seat, a granite bench and memorial to botanist William M. Canby. Canby was the first President of the Board of Park Commissioners and he was responsible for allocating the funds which developed the park after Bancroft donated the land. The stone bench was constructed in 1905 and provides a scenic view of the Brandywine in a spot which was one of Canby's favorites.


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