Gerald R. Ford Birthsite and Gardens

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The Gerald R. Ford Birthsite and Gardens in Omaha, Nebraska marks the location of the house at 3202 Woolworth Avenue where U.S. President Gerald R. Ford lived for a couple of weeks after his birth in July 1913. It was the home of his paternal grandparents, Charles Henry and Martha King.

Contents

History

The King house at 3202 Woolworth Avenue was located on the border of the Hanscom Park and Field Club neighborhoods of Midtown Omaha. It was a three-story, fourteen-room Victorian mansion. It was razed after a 1971 fire caused substantial damage.

Omaha businessman James M. Paxson, who lived in the neighborhood, purchased the vacant lot for $17,250 after Ford became President in 1974. He planned for it to be used for a memorial. Although Paxson donated the site to the city, officials said they couldn't afford to build a memorial. Paxson then set up the Paxson Foundation to fund the memorial and associated gardens. It includes a portico evoking the north side of the White House and a pagoda that resembles a portion of the original home. [1]

Memorial and Ford Conservation Center

The memorial was dedicated in 1977. Ford partnered with Paxson on some fundraising. Ford returned in 1980 for the dedication of a rose garden in honor of Betty Ford. [2]

Adjoining the site is the Gerald R. Ford Conservation Center, a regional center of the Nebraska State Historical Society founded in 1995. It provides conservation services for historical relics. The Center also contains a small exhibit of Ford memorabilia.

The two sites are just to the northwest of Hanscom Park, one of the oldest public parks in Omaha. The house site is four blocks west of the Gerald R. Ford Expressway.

Family

The house was owned by the future president's paternal grandparents, Charles Henry King, a prominent banker, and his wife, the former Martha Alicia Porter. After their son Leslie Lynch King married Dorothy Ayer Gardner on September 7, 1912, the young couple moved into the house with his parents, as was typical of the times. Their first son, named Leslie Lynch King, Jr. was born in July 1913.

Because she had found that King was abusive and had a drinking problem, Dorothy separated from him shortly after the birth, when Leslie, Jr. was only 16 days old.[3] After staying briefly with a sister in Illinois, Dorothy took her son with her to her parents and moved in with them in Grand Rapids, Michigan. That is where the future president grew up.[4] By the end of 1913 Dorothy's divorce from Leslie King was final. A few years later in 1916, Dorothy married Gerald Rudolff Ford. They renamed Leslie, Jr. after him, as Gerald Rudolff Ford, Jr. [5]

References

  1. ^ "Omaha Businessman Foots Bill for Ford Birthplace Memorial" - Nebraska Journal - May 7, 1976
  2. ^ Nebraskahistory.org description
  3. ^ "Nebraska-born, Ford Left State As Infant", Associated Press, December 27, 2006, The New York Times
  4. ^ "Gerald R. Ford Genealogical Information", University of Texas]
  5. ^ "Nebraska-born, Ford Left State As Infant", Associated Press, December 27, 2006, The New York Times

External links


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.