Los Angeles Times

Presidenti­al libraries often unwelcome

Chicago’s battle over a proposal to put Obama’s facility in a public park reflects a familiar history.

- By Dahleen Glanton

CHICAGO — With President Obama expected to choose the site for his library in coming months, Chicagoans have been engaged in a bitter fight over a proposal to place it in a public park. But this is not the first time a presidenti­al library has been at the center of a land dispute.

In College Station, Texas, residents fought Texas A&M University over plans to move a pig farm to make way for the George H.W. Bush Presidenti­al Library and Museum.

Residents in Atlanta tied themselves to trees and lay down in front of bulldozers to stop the city from building a highway through a public park leading to President Carter’s library.

And in Little Rock, Ark., the city evoked eminent domain to make way for President Clinton’s library.

Last month, the Chicago Parks District board voted to transfer roughly 20 acres of parkland to the city if the University of Chicago was chosen to host the Obama library, a move the library’s foundation said “improves Chicago’s bids” for the facility.

The plan has pitted preservati­onists who oppose the land transfer plan against community residents who support it as a means of economic developmen­t. The university’s proposal is to build the library in either Washington Park or Jackson Park.

The dispute has placed the school in a controvers­ial light and given steam to what it considers its biggest rival for the library, Columbia University in New York. The University of Illinois at Chicago remains in the running, as does the University of Hawaii.

The parkland debate is the latest in a long and complicate­d history of land fights involving presidenti­al libraries, said Benjamin Hufbauer, associate professor of art history at the University of Louisville and author of “Presidenti­al Temples: How Memorials and Libraries Shape Public Memory.”

In most cases, presidents have sat on the sidelines while others battled it out on their behalf. But the presidents almost always have the final say on whether to continue the fight or throw in the towel. “In general, presidents don’t want controvers­y. It doesn’t help them,” Hufbauer said.

Even before George W. Bush announced his selection of Southern Methodist University for his library, the

school had been caught up in a dispute with its neighbors.

For years, Southern Methodist had been buying land surroundin­g the Dallas campus. Though the university had kept details of its library bid under wraps, some residents of a nearby condominiu­m complex suspected that the school was attempting to buy up the complex, unit by unit, to build the library there. Most sold their condos willingly, but not Gary Vodicka, who battled the university in court for four years.

In the end, the city seized the land on behalf of the university through eminent domain, and the 347-unit complex was razed. The land is now is part of the grounds of the George W. Bush Presidenti­al Center.

In Little Rock, officials battled over the definition of a park. The city’s plans to build the Clinton library in a decaying warehouse district on the edge of downtown sparked a court battle that lasted nearly five years.

Landowner Gene Pfeifer refused to give up his 3-acre riverfront property in the middle of the proposed library site. In the end, the state Supreme Court allowed the city to acquire the property through eminent domain.

“In the traditiona­l sense, we didn’t displace any houses. But we did displace homeless people in a way that I regret to this day,” said James “Skip” Rutherford, who headed Clinton’s foundation during the constructi­on and is now dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service in Little Rock. “I wish I had toured some of those vacant warehouses before we tore them down.”

When President Carter was about to build his library in the 1980s, a controvers­y developed over a decadesold plan to cut a roadway through Olmsted Linear Park in Atlanta. The twolane highway, then called “Presidenti­al Parkway,” would encircle the Carter library, which sat atop the hill where Union Gen. William Sherman watched Atlanta burn during the Civil War.

Though the park was littered and barely used, residents from affluent neighborho­ods nearby, calling themselves “roadbuster­s,” organized protests to stop constructi­on. In one incident, a woman who had climbed a dogwood tree fell to the ground as city workers sawed it down. After the case was in the courts for more than 12 years, the road was built but cut off before entering the park.

“The original plan would have completely ruined the park,” said Jennifer Richardson, an Atlanta resident who participat­ed in the protests.

When President Reagan announced plans in 1983 to build his library at Stanford University, officials boasted that he would be the first president to open his library while still in the White House.

But residents of Palo Alto didn’t like the idea of a presidenti­al library because of the increased traffic and environmen­tal concerns. Students and faculty at Stanford argued that the library would become an unwanted conservati­ve think tank in the center of the campus. So they joined forces to make sure it didn’t happen.

In 1987, Reagan abandoned the plan and went looking for a site that was more welcoming. He found one in Simi Valley, but even then there were fights over increased traffic, air quality, future developmen­t and even a rare sunflower that grew on the hilltop where the library would be built. It finally opened in 1991.

 ?? Ashlee Rezin Sun-Times Media ?? ACTIVISTS PROTEST in January against the University of Chicago’s proposal to have parkland transferre­d for President Obama’s future library.
Ashlee Rezin Sun-Times Media ACTIVISTS PROTEST in January against the University of Chicago’s proposal to have parkland transferre­d for President Obama’s future library.
 ?? Hawaii Presidenti­al Center ?? A DRAWING of one of the Hawaiian proposals for President Obama’s library. His birth state is competing with bids from Chicago and New York.
Hawaii Presidenti­al Center A DRAWING of one of the Hawaiian proposals for President Obama’s library. His birth state is competing with bids from Chicago and New York.
 ?? Ashlee Rezin Sun-Times Media ?? PARK OFFICIALS hold a hearing on a proposed land transfer to build Obama’s library in Chicago.
Ashlee Rezin Sun-Times Media PARK OFFICIALS hold a hearing on a proposed land transfer to build Obama’s library in Chicago.
 ?? Charles Dharapak Associated Press ?? OBAMA, like past presidents, is keeping his distance from land-use disputes over library plans.
Charles Dharapak Associated Press OBAMA, like past presidents, is keeping his distance from land-use disputes over library plans.
 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? A HAT PROMOTES Chicago’s bid to host Obama’s library, but some residents oppose the plan.
Scott Olson Getty Images A HAT PROMOTES Chicago’s bid to host Obama’s library, but some residents oppose the plan.

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