Talk:Rudolph Ulrich

Contested deletion
This page should not be speedy deleted as an unambiguous copyright infringement, because I intend to fix it. The "Biography" section is a copyright violation, and I must investigate the lede.--Dthomsen8 (talk) 13:22, 7 November 2017 (UTC)


 * Thanks for helping prevent the speedy deletion of this stub article. I threw the page up as a place holder late last night, and intended to work on it more today. I personally spearheaded the restoration of Ulrich's Hotel Del Monte Arizona Garden as Executive Officer at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) from 1993-1995, continuing with the project even after my retirement from the USN in Dec 1994. Julie Cain, whose article I linked to, used the research I collected on Ulrich's groundbreaking Arizona Gardens to spearhead the authentic restoration of Stanford University's much more badly neglected Arizona Garden, beginning in 1999. I turned over my archives, records and photographs to the NPS Public Affairs Office in 2001; these records form part of the NPS Museum collection. I found Ulrich tough to research, despite his fascinating life and works (for example: I located information in San Francisco's botanical gardens library indicating Ulrich had assisted Frederick Law Olmsted with the design and construction of New York's Central Park as one of his earliest projects after arriving in the USA), as there is little in print regarding him. Dr. David Streatfield, whose quote I had placed on the initial version of this article, was a key resource in my research. In order that Ulrich's name and role as the designer and architect of the HDM/NPS Arizona Garden would not again be forgotten, the Friends of the Arizona Garden had a bronze plaque made and mounted on a large boulder in the center of the Garden. Our names are written into the concrete base buried beneath the boulder. I'll step back now, tho, and let y'all take the lead on this article. Akindofmagick (talk) 14:39, 7 November 2017 (UTC)


 * May I suppose that you will carry on with this article, where you have far more knowledge and research results than I do? --Dthomsen8 (talk) 21:26, 7 November 2017 (UTC)


 * Nope. You willy-nilly deleted my initial work on this page and utterly diluted my efforts in less than 24 hours. My interest in Ulrich is admittedly focused on the roughly 15 "Arizona Gardens" he created in California, two of which are still extant: one at the former Hotel Del Monte (now the Naval Postgraduate School), and one at Stanford University. (The one on the grounds of what is now Sunset Magazine headquarters was destroyed decades ago.) I will leave it up to you to recreate my years of research and on-site labors. I'm going back to gardening in Intellipedia, where I've been a sysop for over a decade. Akindofmagick (talk) 04:53, 11 February 2018 (UTC)