Acorn Park facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Acorn Urban Park |
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Acorn Park | |
Acorn Park in 2008
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Type | Urban park |
Location |
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Area | 0.12470618-acre (0.050-hectare) |
Established | 1942 |
Etymology | Acorn–shaped gazebo |
Owned by | Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M–NCPPC) |
Administered by | Montgomery Parks |
Open | Sunrise to sunset |
Public transit access |
- For Arthur D. Little's office park in Cambridge, Massachusetts, see Cambridge Discovery Park.
Acorn Park is a 0.1247-acre (0.050-hectare) urban park in downtown Silver Spring, Maryland, which features an acorn-shaped gazebo and an artificial grotto. The site is historically significant as it is thought to be the location of the "mica-flecked spring" that in 1840 inspired Francis Preston Blair to name his estate "Silver Spring".
Acorn Park is located at the intersection of East-West Highway and Newell Street.
History
The gazebo in Acorn Park was constructed in 1842 by Benjamin C. King. Francis Blair's son-in-law, Samuel Phillips Lee, had the stone grotto built at the site of the spring in 1894. It originally included a statue of a Greek nymph. The park land was purchased by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission in 1942 and was refurbished and rededicated in 1955. A small additional tract of land was acquired by M-NCPPC in 1997, to make the current 0.1247-acre (0.05 ha).