Vincent de Paul Basilica in Bydgoszcz
Church building · Bydgoszcz
Urban park
Wincenty Witos Ludowy Park is a 6.42 hectares (15.9 acres) urban park in downtown district of Bydgoszcz, Poland.
The park is located in downtown Bydgoszcz, surrounded by the following streets:
- Maksymiliana Piotrowskiego in the east;
- Markwarta in the north. The area has a roughly rectangle shape, 250 metres (820 ft) by 275 metres (902 ft) and stands between the Youth Palace ( Polish : Pałac Młodzieży ) at 27 Jagiellońska street and the Basilica of St. Vincent de Paul.
It has been named after Wincenty Witos (1874-1945), a Polish politician, activist of the Peasant movement and three times Prime Minister.
The Ludowy Park ( People's Park ) was established on the site of a Protestant cemetery. The latter dated back to 1778 and was the oldest and the largest in Bydgoszcz.
The area for the cemetery, purchased from the Grodztwo estate, was later expanded and eventually covered a surface of 6.5 hectares (16 acres). In 1838, a residential house for the administrator was erected on the premises, where a separate room was used as a morgue. In 1884, a chapel was built and in 1898, a massive brick fence. That latter survived until the liquidation of the cemetery.
Four forged gates opened onto the streets: two onto Jagiellońska and two onto Markwarta. Inside the site, 8 metres (26 ft) wide roads, flanked with lindens, ran from the gates, leading to the chapel located on a large central square. A network of paths beaming out from the center divided the cemetery into quarters.
- around the square oaks and chestnuts ;
- in the quarters common beeches, pubescent, sessile and red oaks, robinias, birches, largeleaf lindens ;
- along the fencing Norway, blue and white spruces ;
- near the gardener house catalpa trees. In 1938, a survey listed 66 species of trees and shrubs in the cemetery.
Although many people of merit, mainly of German nationality, found their resting place here, in 1927, Polish authorities decided the liquidation of the cemetery, pleading in the one hand a significant reduction of Evangelicals in the city (after the recreation of Polish state ) and on the other hand the plan to rebuild the surrounding streets for sanitary reasons. The municipal decision was appealed against to the Supreme Administrative Tribunal which in 1934, denied the will of the municipal authorities.
After the end of WWII and the liberation of Bydgoszcz in 1945, the old cemetery was definitively closed. Protestants were offered plots at the Evangelical-Augsburg cemetery in Zaświat street. The eventual liquidation of the old gravesite, started in 1946, was completed in 1953. The last exhumation to be moved to the Zaświat street site was held in 1956. During the liquidation, many artifacts were lost or destroyed: tombstones, sculptures, reliefs, catacombs. It included family tombs and resting place of famous personages: Theodor Gottlieb von Hippel the Younger (1775-1843), Carl and Wilhelm Blumwe, city successful entrepreneurs, who saw only their grave sculpture preserved (a copy of Bertel Thorvaldsen 's statue of Christ the Savior ) and moved to the front square of the Lutheran Church of the Savior in Bydgoszcz. The work piece is still standing nowadays.
As the cemetery closed, a municipal urban park named Ludowy Park ( People's Park ) was established in its very place, boasting the old greenery left from the necropolis. In 1956, an acoustical shell was erected on the premises, with facilities for band performances. Afterwards were constructed around the area:
- three apartment blocks on the western edge of the park;
- pavilions on the eastern side, hosting the Bydgoszcz Automobile Club and a café, "Parkowa";
On June 3, 1984, on the initiative of the United People's Party, the park was named after Polish politician Wincenty Witos. For the occasion, a bust of the activist was unveiled: it had been realized by Witold Marciniak and funded by the peasants from the Bydgoszcz Voivodeship. Furthermore, between this monument and the concert shell, a circular fountain was built.
In 2007,several elements of the park were renovated (park alleys, concert shell) and the greenery was restored. During these works, a monument commemorating the ancient Protestant cemetery was unveiled on April 24, 2007. It consists of a black granite, placed in the south-eastern corner of the compound, which bears the following inscription:
In memory of those resting at the former Evangelical cemetery.