Bandstand
Public parks sprang up as a response to the increasingly polluted
urban environments created by the industrial revolution in the 1800s.
Urbanization
and industrialization began to change American life by the 1840s.
Large, open, green areas were planned to offer city dwellers a place to
reconnect with nature.
With the inclusion of bandstands,
amphitheatres, and playgrounds, parks became a community gathering
place for concerts, recreation, and other activities.
Truxtun
Beale donated five acres of land on Oleander Avenue for the building of
the first park in the City of Bakersfield in 1908. Beale donated all
the materials for landscaping the park and construction of the Greek
Theatre and swimming pool at the park.
This structure is a recreated bandstand using wood recycled from what was possibly an old storage building.
![]() 87.CentralPark.1 Central Park near downtown Bakersfield, circa 1920. | ![]() Reconstructing the bandstand at the Museum in 1956. |
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