The garden historian and author, Barbara Vogt, writes in her book "Siesmayer's Gardens":
The former von Dietel'sche Park in Oberliederbach was created almost at the same time as the Palmengarten. The client was the Saint Petersburg merchant Adolf Meyer, who had acquired a modest manor house with an adjoining area in 1866. The property probably extended to the Untermühle am Liederbach. The park was created here from the late 1860s to the mid-1870s, and its finely curved floor modeling still reveals the hand of its creator Heinrich Siesmayer. The Liederbach limited the park in the east.
Old oaks, mighty sycamores and hemlocks probably still saw Adolf Meyer, his daughter, who inherited the property in 1876, and his granddaughter Adele von Dietel walking in the park. Adele and her husband Alwin Woldemar von Dietel, owners of the complex since 1892, no longer content themselves with the simple, clapboard half-timbered building opposite the Protestant parish church, but had a magnificent residential building built in the park in 1911/12 in the style of an Italian Renaissance villa.
The manor house and villa are now on the edge of the green area, where numerous buildings from recent decades have also risen. The park seems quite manageable today, but its charm has been preserved and attracts Liederbachers of all ages.