The following biography is from Natalie Park Schutz, a daughter of David Park, who also credits her sister Helen Park Bigelow. David Park's father was Charles Edwards Park, an esteemed Unitarian... Read full biography
The following biography is from Natalie Park Schutz, a daughter of David Park, who also credits her sister Helen Park Bigelow. David Park's father was Charles Edwards Park, an esteemed Unitarian minister at the First Church in Boston (now called First and Second Church in Boston, and now... Read full biography
The following biography is from Natalie Park Schutz, a daughter of David Park, who also credits her sister Helen Park Bigelow. David Park's father was Charles Edwards Park, an esteemed Unitarian minister at the First Church in Boston (now called First and Second Church in Boston, and now Unitarian-Universalist) for all David's life. It is in the Back Bay, where the family lived in a brick row house on Marlborough Street. David had one older sister and two brothers, one older, and one 6 years... Read full biography
The following biography is from Natalie Park Schutz, a daughter of David Park, who also credits her sister Helen Park Bigelow. David Park's father was Charles Edwards Park, an esteemed Unitarian minister at the First Church in Boston (now called First and Second Church in Boston, and now Unitarian-Universalist) for all David's life. It is in the Back Bay, where the family lived in a brick row house on Marlborough Street. David had one older sister and two brothers, one older, and one 6 years younger, writer Edwards Park. The family was close knit, with cousins on all sides. Summers were spent at a house in the woods outside of Peterborough, New Hampshire. David was determined from early childhood to become an artist. Though his parents... Read full biography
The following biography is from Natalie Park Schutz, a daughter of David Park, who also credits her sister Helen Park Bigelow. David Park's father was Charles Edwards Park, an esteemed Unitarian minister at the First Church in Boston (now called First and Second Church in Boston, and now Unitarian-Universalist) for all David's life. It is in the Back Bay, where the family lived in a brick row house on Marlborough Street. David had one older sister and two brothers, one older, and one 6 years younger, writer Edwards Park. The family was close knit, with cousins on all sides. Summers were spent at a house in the woods outside of Peterborough, New Hampshire. David was determined from early childhood to become an artist. Though his parents expected him to follow the family's New England tradition and achieve a proper education, he was an... Read full biography