Did early God and Nature striving people who designed the first town greens inspire one of the greatest landscape architects Federick Law Olmstead?

Without a doubt, Frederick Law Olmstead was the best landscape architect of his time. He designed Central Park and the Biltmore Estate lands and advocated for the conservation of Adirondack Park, among many other significant accomplishments. As far as I know, the first town green on this continent was Guilford, Connecticut, but we do not hear much about its origins. Was Thomas Griswold the first Guilford Town Green and the Town Center designer?

Knowing what I know about extreme competitiveness, it seems like Olmstead was very hard-working, and some power source drove him. Was he promoted by a certain power source to be ultra-competitive during the railroad because Natural beauty was touted as one of the benefits of railroading? If so, it reminds me of an itinerant hierarchical structure promotion for some extreme competition. Was he a part of the political machine that may have had something to do with extreme business, agriculture competition, and iron industry competition? I am not sure at this point, but he seemed driven beyond Natural healthiness when considering his sleep schedule and commitments. Was he an employee of big money competition? He was associated with Central Park in New York and the Biltmore Estate of the Vanderbilts. Was it a competition to master the important Nature values and Nature immersion similar to the early town centers and town greens? I still respect him for his contributions because it is likely more about the power structures, processes, procedures, politics, extreme competition, and manufactured favoritism.

Regardless of whether it is true, it may provide insight into methods, practices, processes, and procedures used in hierarchical structure extraction, exchange, exclusion, employment violence, or liberty cycle extremism that developed during the 1800s. It shows the competitive promotion processes as itinerantly created, perfect, hard-working people take over the original creators of ideas and energy allocators. It also gives a clearer picture of how adaptive leveraging and creativity work without inclusion or credit for original ideas. Does it show the taking process? Does it show how planes, trains, and automobiles proliferated worldwide? Does it show how golf and skiing proliferated around the world?