"Make Way for Ducklings" (1941)

From Boston Wiki

Make Way for Ducklings (1941) is a children's picture book written and illustrated by Robert McCloskey, published by Houghton Mifflin on September 15, 1941. The story follows a pair of mallard ducks, Mr. and Mrs. Mallard, as they search for a safe place to raise their ducklings in Boston, ultimately settling in the Boston Public Garden. The book won the Caldecott Medal in 1942, awarded by the American Library Association to the most distinguished American illustrator of children's books published the preceding year, and it remains one of the best-selling and most widely recognized picture books in American publishing history.[1] Its connection to Boston has given the book a lasting civic presence, most visibly through the bronze sculpture by Nancy Schön installed in the Public Garden in 1987, which has become one of the city's most recognized public artworks.[2]

The book's narrative and illustrations draw on McCloskey's direct observation of Boston's urban landscape, particularly the Charles River and the Public Garden, during the period when he was developing the manuscript and artwork in the late 1930s and early 1940s. McCloskey's illustrations, rendered in warm lithographic pencil drawings, depict the ducks navigating city streets, interacting with a sympathetic police officer named Michael, and eventually settling on an island in the Public Garden's lagoon. The 64-page picture book has been continuously in print since its first publication and has been translated into numerous languages, extending its readership far beyond the United States.[3]

Plot Summary

The story opens with Mr. and Mrs. Mallard searching for a place to build their nest along the Charles River. After surveying several unsuitable locations, including an island in the river where a boy on a bicycle nearly runs them over, Mrs. Mallard selects a quiet spot near the riverbank. She hatches eight ducklings, whom she names Jack, Kack, Lack, Mack, Nack, Ouack, Pack, and Quack, and spends weeks teaching them to swim, dive, and walk in a line. When the family decides to move to their permanent home in the Public Garden, Mrs. Mallard leads the ducklings through the streets of Boston. A police officer named Michael, who had previously befriended the ducks, stops traffic on Beacon Street to allow the family to cross safely, with assistance from other officers. The ducks arrive at the Public Garden, where Mr. Mallard is waiting, and the family settles on the island in the lagoon, content that they have found their home.

History

Robert McCloskey was born on September 15, 1914, in Hamilton, Ohio, and studied art at the Vesper George School of Art in Boston and later at the National Academy of Design in New York City.[4] His early time in Boston introduced him to the city's neighborhoods, parks, and waterways, experiences that would later form the geographic and atmospheric foundation of Make Way for Ducklings. While developing the book, McCloskey undertook an unusual step to ensure the accuracy of his illustrations: he purchased live mallard ducks and kept them in his New York City apartment, observing and sketching their movements, postures, and behavior at close range over an extended period.[5] This direct observation is evident in the illustrations' precise and naturalistic rendering of duck anatomy and movement, which critics and educators have noted as a distinguishing quality of the book's artwork.

The publication of Make Way for Ducklings in 1941 coincided with the United States' entry into World War II, yet the book's focus on the domestic concerns of a duck family navigating an urban environment offered readers a grounded and comforting narrative during a period of significant national uncertainty. The story's setting in Boston, particularly its depiction of the Public Garden and the Charles River, was a deliberate choice by McCloskey to anchor the narrative in a recognizable and real environment. The book was awarded the Caldecott Medal in 1942, an honor that brought it immediate national attention and established McCloskey as a major figure in American children's literature.[6] McCloskey went on to win a second Caldecott Medal in 1958 for Time of Wonder, making him one of only a small number of illustrators to receive the award twice.

Houghton Mifflin, the Boston-based publishing house that first published the book, has since undergone significant corporate changes. The company merged with Harcourt in 2007 to form Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, which has since rebranded as HMH Books & Media. Despite these changes in ownership and corporate structure, Make Way for Ducklings has remained continuously in print and is still published under the Houghton Mifflin imprint, a testament to the book's consistent commercial and cultural relevance across more than eight decades.[7]

The book's legacy was further extended in 1991, when Barbara Bush, then First Lady of the United States, gifted a replica of Nancy Schön's duckling sculpture to the Soviet Union during a goodwill visit. The replica was installed in Novodevichy Park in Moscow and was intended as a symbol of friendship between the United States and the Soviet Union during a period of significant diplomatic change. The Moscow sculpture has since become a popular attraction in its own right, and it was notably vandalized in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, with the ducklings painted in the colors of the Ukrainian flag by local residents in an act of protest.[8]

Geography

The geographical setting of Make Way for Ducklings is rooted in specific, identifiable locations within Boston's urban landscape. The story begins along the Charles River, which forms the boundary between Boston and Cambridge and has served as a central geographic and ecological feature of the city for centuries. The river provides the Mallards with their first home in Boston and serves as the initial environment in which the ducklings are raised. McCloskey's illustrations accurately depict the river's shoreline, bridges, and surrounding urban context, grounding the narrative in a landscape that Boston residents recognize immediately.

The Boston Public Garden, where the story concludes, was established in 1837 as the first public botanical garden in the United States.[9] Its 24 acres — the article's earlier figure of 84 acres refers to the combined area of the Public Garden and the adjacent Boston Common — include a central lagoon, winding paths, and a diverse planting of ornamental trees and flowers. The lagoon's island, where the Mallard family ultimately settles, is a real feature of the garden, and visitors familiar with the book often note the correspondence between McCloskey's illustrated landscape and the actual park. The Public Garden's design, inspired by the English landscape garden tradition, emphasizes naturalistic arrangements of plantings and water features that create the impression of a rural landscape within a dense urban environment, a quality that McCloskey captured in his illustrations and that remains central to the garden's character today.

The route that Mrs. Mallard and the ducklings travel through Boston's streets in the book follows a path through the Beacon Hill neighborhood and across Beacon Street, one of the city's principal thoroughfares. The streets depicted in the book are real and still navigable today, and the crossing at Beacon Street near the Public Garden entrance remains a recognizable landmark for readers familiar with both the book and the city.

Culture and Legacy

Make Way for Ducklings has had a sustained influence on Boston's cultural identity, functioning simultaneously as a work of children's literature, a piece of civic symbolism, and a reference point for discussions about the relationship between urban development and wildlife. The book is regularly used in Boston's public schools and libraries as part of early literacy programming, and the Boston Public Library and the Boston Children's Museum have both developed educational initiatives that draw on the book's themes of community, environmental awareness, and navigating an urban landscape.[10]

The most tangible expression of the book's cultural legacy is the bronze sculpture created by Nancy Schön and installed in the Boston Public Garden on October 4, 1987.[11] The sculpture depicts Mrs. Mallard leading her eight ducklings in a line along a garden path, rendered at life-size scale in cast bronze. Schön, a Boston-area sculptor, was commissioned for the work as part of a broader effort to honor the book's connection to the city and to provide a permanent public monument to McCloskey's contribution to American literature. The sculpture has become one of the most photographed public artworks in New England, drawing visitors throughout the year and serving as a gathering point for families, school groups, and tourists. It is a tradition among many Boston families to bring young children to climb on and pose with the ducklings, and the figures' surfaces have acquired a distinctive patina from decades of handling.

The sculpture's cultural reach extends well beyond Boston. The 1991 gift of a replica to Moscow, arranged by Barbara Bush as a gesture of diplomatic goodwill, reflected the degree to which the book and its imagery had achieved a form of international recognition that transcended its origins as a regional story.[12] The Moscow sculpture's subsequent fate — including its use as a site of political protest following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine — demonstrated how deeply the imagery had been absorbed into public consciousness far from Boston.[13]

The book has also influenced a range of artistic and theatrical interpretations over the decades, including stage adaptations, musical versions, and community art projects. It is frequently cited by children's literature scholars as a foundational text in the American picture book tradition, valued both for the quality of McCloskey's illustration and for the way the narrative integrates a specific urban geography into a story accessible to young children.

Notable Associations

While Make Way for Ducklings is primarily the work of Robert McCloskey, its sustained presence in Boston's cultural life has involved a number of other significant contributors. McCloskey, who was born in Hamilton, Ohio in 1914 and died on June 30, 2003, spent formative years in Boston that directly shaped the book's setting and sensibility.[14] Although he did not spend his entire career in Boston, his affection for the city's public spaces and his precise observation of its geography left a lasting mark on both the book and the city's relationship to it.

Nancy Schön, the sculptor responsible for the 1987 Public Garden installation, is a Boston-area artist whose work includes a number of other public sculptures in the region. Her commission for the duckling sculpture was one of her most prominent projects, and the work has become the piece most closely associated with her name in the public imagination. Schön's approach to the sculpture emphasized naturalism and accessibility, qualities that align closely with McCloskey's own illustration style, and the resulting work has been widely praised for its fidelity to the spirit of the original book.

Boston's public schools and libraries have played an ongoing institutional role in sustaining the book's relevance, incorporating it into reading curricula and literacy programs that serve children across the city's diverse neighborhoods. Educators and librarians have used the book not only as an introduction to narrative storytelling but also as a point of entry for discussions about Boston's geography, urban ecology, and history, subjects that the book illuminates in an accessible and engaging way for young readers.

Economy

The economic impact of Make Way for Ducklings on Boston is most directly visible in the tourism activity generated by the duckling sculpture in the Public Garden. The garden itself attracts a substantial volume of visitors annually, and the sculpture functions as one of its primary draws, particularly for families traveling with young children. Visitors to the sculpture contribute to the local economy through spending at nearby hotels, restaurants, and retail establishments in the Back Bay and Beacon Hill neighborhoods, both of which benefit from the steady flow of tourists drawn to the Public Garden and its surroundings.

The book's enduring commercial success has also sustained a market for licensed merchandise, including plush toys, apparel, and housewares featuring the book's characters and imagery. Boston-area gift shops, museum stores, and the Boston Children's Museum retail outlet are among the local businesses that carry such merchandise, connecting the book's publishing revenue to the city's retail economy. The broader publishing legacy of the book — continuously in print for more than eight decades and translated into multiple languages — has made it a reliable source of revenue for HMH Books & Media, the successor to the original publisher, Houghton Mifflin.

Beyond direct commercial activity, the book has contributed to Boston's reputation as a city with a distinctive literary and cultural identity, a reputation that supports the city's cultural tourism economy more broadly. The Public Garden, Beacon Hill, and the Charles River Esplanade are all marketed in part through their associations with well-known works of literature and public art, and Make Way for Ducklings is among the most prominent of these associations, appearing in city tourism materials, educational resources, and media coverage of Boston's cultural life.

Attractions

The duckling sculpture in the Boston Public Garden is among the city's most frequently visited public artworks, drawing visitors throughout all four seasons. The sculpture is situated along a garden path near the Charles Street entrance, making it easily accessible from both the garden's interior and the surrounding streets. The Public Garden itself encompasses 24 acres of landscaped grounds and includes the famous Swan Boats, which have operated on the garden's lagoon since 1877, as well as ornamental flower beds, a suspension bridge, and a variety of mature trees. The garden is adjacent to Boston Common, the country's oldest public park, and the two spaces together form a continuous green corridor in the heart of the city.

The area around the duckling sculpture is particularly popular with families and school groups, and the sculpture is often incorporated into guided walking tours of Boston's literary and historical landmarks. The Public Garden's proximity to other major attractions — including the Massachusetts State House, the Boston Athenaeum, and the retail and dining options along Newbury Street — makes it a natural stopping point for visitors exploring the city on foot. The garden is also a central feature of the Freedom Trail, which passes through the adjacent Boston Common, further integrating it into the city's established tourist infrastructure.

Getting There

The Boston Public Garden is accessible by several modes of transportation. The MBTA Green Line serves the area via the Arlington station, which is located directly adjacent to the garden's primary entrance on Arlington Street, making public transit the most direct and convenient option for most visitors.[15] Several MBTA bus routes also serve the surrounding streets. Visitors arriving by car will find the garden situated in the heart of the Back Bay, near the intersection of Beacon Street and Charles Street, though parking in the immediate area is limited and the neighborhood's one-way street grid can make navigation challenging; public garages are available nearby on Charles Street and in the adjacent Prudential Center complex.

For visitors arriving by air, Logan International Airport is located approximately three miles from the Public Garden by road. The MBTA Silver Line provides service from the airport to South Station, from which visitors can transfer to the Red Line and then to the Green Line for access to the Arlington station. Taxi and rideshare services are also readily available from the airport. The garden's location in a densely walkable part of Boston means that visitors staying in hotels in the Back Bay, Beacon Hill, or downtown neighborhoods can typically reach it on foot.

Neighborhoods

The Boston Public Garden is located in the Back Bay neighborhood, a district developed on filled land in the second half of the 19th century through one of the largest urban land reclamation projects in American history. Before the filling project, the area was a tidal flat of the Charles River; the transformation of this land into a residential and commercial district between roughly 1857 and 1882 created the grid of streets and Victorian brownstones that characterize Back Bay today. The neighborhood is home to Newbury Street, a major commercial corridor, as well as the Boston Public Library's central branch

  1. ["Caldecott Medal Winners 1938–Present"], American Library Association, accessed 2024.
  2. Schön, Nancy. ["Make Way for Ducklings Sculpture"], nancyschon.com, accessed 2024.
  3. Silvey, Anita, ed. Children's Books and Their Creators. Houghton Mifflin, 1995.
  4. Marcus, Leonard S. Ways of Telling: Fourteen Interviews with Masters of the Art of the Picture Book. Dutton, 2002.
  5. Marcus, Leonard S. Ways of Telling: Fourteen Interviews with Masters of the Art of the Picture Book. Dutton, 2002.
  6. ["Caldecott Medal Winners 1938–Present"], American Library Association, accessed 2024.
  7. HMH Books & Media, official publication records for Make Way for Ducklings, accessed 2024.
  8. ["Boston's Make Way for Ducklings Statues in Moscow Vandalized"], The Boston Globe, March 2022.
  9. ["Boston Public Garden History"], City of Boston, accessed 2024.
  10. ["Educational Programs"], Boston Children's Museum, accessed 2024.
  11. Schön, Nancy. ["Make Way for Ducklings Sculpture"], nancyschon.com, accessed 2024.
  12. George H.W. Bush Presidential Library, records related to the 1991 Moscow duckling statue gift, accessed 2024.
  13. ["Boston's Make Way for Ducklings Statues in Moscow Vandalized"], The Boston Globe, March 2022.
  14. Silvey, Anita, ed. Children's Books and Their Creators. Houghton Mifflin, 1995.
  15. ["Arlington Station"], Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, accessed 2024.