| Officially: |
Genius
of the Waters |
| Built: |
1869-1871
|
| Designed
by: |
August
von Kreling |
| Type: |
Monument |
|
Maximum height: |
35
feet (Not 43 feet, as is commonly reported). |
| Location: |
Fountain
Square
|
Many
cities define themselves around a center point. Not
necessarily a geographic center, but a spiritual or
iconic landmark. In Cincinnati, the Tyler Davidson
Fountain is the heart of the city. Reverence for the
fountain is such that it might as well pump the city's
blood as water. The fountain is named after Tyler
Davidson, a hardware store owner and city leader who
first decided the city needed a fountain. He died
before his dream could be made real. But his brother-in-law,
and business partner, Henry Probasco carried on his
vision. Its was Probasco who commissioned a Bavarian
artist to create a fountain celebrating water itself.
The result is the "Genius of the Waters" a nine-foot-tall
personification of the element with water streaming
from her hands. She is surrounded by four adult figures
each depicting practical uses for water. Those figures
are surrounded by four children illustrating the pleasures
of water. The entire affair is surrounded by panels
showing the industrial uses of water, and finally
there are four drinking fountains.
- In
the winter, when the water is turned off, twinkling
lights take the place of the showers of water that
fall from the fountain's hands. The Lighting of
the Fountain ceremony is accompanied by a huge party
downtown.
- When
the fountain was initially connected to the water
supply, there was not enough pressure to make it
spew out of the hands. A separate water line was
dug from Fountain Square to the old reservoir (now
under Eden Park) to increase the pressure.
- 1970
- The fountain is renovated.
- 1999-2000
- The fountain undergoes a major renovation repairing
cracks, corrosion, and damage done during the 1970
repairs.
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