More than a century ago - in 1911 - Mary Thayer Montague donated 49 acres of pristine land to the City of Chattanooga for use as a park.
But by the 1940’s, the park in the Southside had become a construction landfill.
Later, Montague Park was used for recreation: kite competitions, motocross racing, softball tournaments.
However, by 2003, the park had become a brownfield - and environmental concerns forced its closure.
A few years later came the idea of a sculpture park on the site - and sculptor John Henry led the grassroots effort to establish it safely.
In 2016, Sculpture Fields at Montague Park opened on 33 acres of the site - now the largest sculpture park in the Southeast.
!["Ardent" by Andrew Light at Sculpture Fields.](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/12422e2/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1079x1079+0+0/resize/880x880!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F3e%2F7b%2F974d079c4174bcf2dcd411688c4b%2Fsculpture-fields-ardent-with-logo.png)
This Saturday, the annual sculpture burn - Fire Up the Fields - will be held at the park, starting at 5:30 PM.
Today, the vision for the future of Sculpture Fields looks bright - as part of a recently-proposed reimagining of the entire Montague Park site.
With that in mind, we are looking back on the creation of Sculpture Fields with a series of conversations here on “Scenic Roots.”
Pamela Henry moved to Chattanooga with her husband John in 2000.
Sculpture Fields as it is today would not be here without them - and what stands there now is also a tribute to John, who died last year.
Cathy Clifford began working for John and Pamela in 2006 at John Henry Sculptor, Inc. - and then, as executive director of Sculpture Fields.
Jay Heavilon is emeritus honorary trustee of the Sculpture Fields Board of Directors.
_____
Stay tuned for more of our conversations on Sculpture Fields at Montague Park this week here on “Scenic Roots.”
More details on Saturday's Fire Up the Fields at sculpturefields.org.