Red Lion's towering Fairmont Park off the beaten track
Fairmont Park in Red Lion owes its existence to Highland Park in West Manchester Township, maybe 10 miles away.
The link was the trolley system that snaked throughout the county at the turn of the 20th century.
The Red Lion Centennial Commission’s history said popular Sunday excursions to Highland Park sparked some ministers and churches to protest inappropriate activities on the solemn Sabbath... .
Townsman J.A. Miller saw an opportunity to provide a quieter Sabbath opportunity and cleared Fairmont Park, Red Lion’s tallest point and one of York County’s highest as well.
To do so, he received permission from the land’s owner, Catherine Meyer, the mother of Red Lion. For decades, Meyer was one of that borough's most respected citizens, no small feat for a woman in those days.
A picnic pavilion sprang up the next year and other improvements followed. The park is officially dated 1938, after Depression-era workers landscaped the grounds facing Boundary Avenue. On the other side, the park offers one of York County’s best views.
In 1946, workers constructed the park’s most interesting feature — a military memorial. It commemorated five World War I and 27 World War II dead from the Red Lion area. During WWII, a flag in the town’s square bore the stars of the dead, but the monument permanently marked their sacrifice.
The park area is lined with beautiful brick homes and at least one bed and breakfast. It has the feel of another world, on top of a tall hill.
Yet it’s off Broadway, Red Lion’s main drag, so one of York County’s most beautiful parks goes overlooked.
At least, it has outlasted its older cousin, Highland Park. The old street car park off Highland Avenue is now mostly a quarry.
So there it is, overlooked York County landmark No. 23, Red Lion’s Fairmount Park. Other overlooked York County sites and landmarks (See posts under York Town Square):
-- The Little Courthouse
-- Prospect Hill Cemetery
-- War Mothers Memorial
-- Work War II USO at former York County Academy gymnasium
-- York’s Salem Square soldiers monument
-- York’s Cookes House
-- York’s rowhouses
-- Wrightsville’s monuments
-- The Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge
-- Memorial trees along highways Route 30 & Susquehanna Trail.
-- The Inches
-- Camp Stewartstown
-- The Wrightsville Bridge supports
-- New York Wire Co.’s factory whistle
-- Mary Ann Furnace
-- York’s Hartman Building
-- Hanover’s Iron Mike and The Picket
-- York’s Eberts Lane
-- Helen Reeves Thackston Memorial Park
-- WW II defense worker housing
-- Shiloh’s former town square
-- Loucks one-room school







