Skip to content

Italian Lake Skinny Dippers - PZC-GT #7 Mystery Cache

This cache has been archived.

perryzip: thank you

More
Hidden : 1/6/2008
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


Italian Lake, located at 3rd and Division Streets in uptown Harrisburg, PA, is one of those parks that may be unknown to some and forgotten by others. Prior to its creation in the early 1930's the lake area was a marshy swamp much like some of the areas at nearby Wildwood Lake.  The man made lake has had its good times and bad, but currently it's in fine shape and it's a  beautifully serene place to visit. Surrounded by benches, gardens, sculpted shrubbery and lighting, the lake is pinched in the middle forming upper and lower water portions. The center is crossed by a cool Japanese style arched bridge with steps and a ramp. A riser for the Italian Lake Concert Series performances completes the scene.

In the lower portion of the lake stands a fountain sculpture named “Dance of the Eternal Spring” and that has a story all its own. Created in 1909 by Philadelphia sculptor Giuseppe Donato, it was originally commissioned by Milton Hershey for his gardens. When the piece was completed the three nude dancing nymphs offended the conservative Hershey and he refused to accept it. It is said that Hershey's conservative nature with money was more to play here than anything else. The agreed upon price was $3100 and Hershey paid $2000 as a down payment. When Donato came to collect, the finished cost turned out to be $31,000 - ten times the agreed upon price. That coupled with the nudity and the fact that the models had unsavory reputations as nude dancing girls - Hershey refused to pay and ended up in court. Donato won the suit and was paid an additional $24,000.

This is where Harrisburg enters the story. The ticked off Hershey had left the nymphs in their crate in a railroad car at The Hershey Railway Station until 1920 when he donated it to Harrisburg's Mayor John K. Royal for Reservoir Park. Eighteen years later it was moved when the J. Horace McFarland Rose Garden opened at The Polyclinic Hospital. (the nymphs were inching closer to their current home) While residing in the hospital rose garden, a tradition emerged, nursing school seniors would adorn the nymphs in lingerie the night before their graduation. The hospital eventually turned the rose garden into a parking lot and those embarrassing lingerie days for the nymphs were finally over. In 1971 the sculpture was moved to Italian Lake and in the crowd that day for its dedication was none other than Madeline Stokes, one of the storied dancers who had contributed to the chocolate makers disgust with this beautiful work of art. That next year Stokes passed away at the age of 98.

Just a little on Madeline Stokes before you head out with your GPS. Born Amanda Straw in Fishing Creek Valley in 1875 - yep you read it right, she called rural Fishing Creek Valley home. Amanda changed her name to Madeline Stokes after she moved to Philadelphia and started a vaudeville career. Even as she approached her late 30s, Stokes was quite the popular model, appearing on the cover of numerous magazines. If you visit Philadelphia's Fairmount Park she's on the sundial created by Alexander Caldwell II. If you've ever visited the governor's reception room at the capitol her likeness appears in a mural there. Wow! Whatta' gal!

All right already - enough fun history - go find the cache!

To claim this cache:

- Find the cache - park hours 6am-10pm
- Sign the log - BYOP

- Post your photo with the nymphs behind you - this is not an additional logging requirement, it's just for fun!

This is part of our Perryzip Crew Geocache Trail (PZC-GT). In an attempt to share neat places and things, we’ve come up with this trail around the PA capital region. Please be sure to make note of the single digit number written on the log. When you've completed the trail and combine the numbers in cache numerical order, you'll have the coordinates to the Unknown Cache 'City of Harrisburg - PZC-GT #16 (THE FINAL)'. Have fun!

 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Gubfr alzcuf pbhyq or zvfgnxra sbe fveraf...

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)