Location
Mid-Park on the north side of 72nd Street
Description
Sculptor: Emma Stebbins (1815-1882)
Date: 1868; Placed in Park: 1873
Donor: City of New York
Material: Bronze figures, blue stone lower basin
In their 1858 Greensward Plan, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux called
the architectural heart of the Park "The Water Terrace," for its
placement beside the Lake and the grand fountain in the center. Once the Angel
of the Waters fountain was unveiled in 1873, however, the area became forever
known as Bethesda Terrace. At the dedication, the artist's brochure quoted
the Biblical verse from the Gospel of St. John 5:2-4: "Now there is at
Jerusalem by the sheep market a pool, which is called… Bethesda…whoever
then first after the troubling of the waters stepped in was made whole of
whatsoever disease he had." The artist likened the healing powers of
the angel to that of the clean and pure Croton water, delicately cascading
down the fountain, that brought health to the people of New York City. The
lily in her hand represents purity while the four figures below represent
Peace, Health, Purity, and Temperance. Stebbins, the sister of the president
of the Board of the Commissioners of Central Park, was the first woman to
receive a sculptural commission in New York City.