Posts tagged amusement park
I know that I’ve been bragging a lot about cool stuff I’ve been doing at work, but this is awesome.
Actually, I it’s really only that cool to me.
Filed under National Museum of American History smithsonian medal pershing coney island steeplechase park george c. tilyou amusement park american history
On an average day in Coney Island from the years 1890 to 1915, these are a few of the amazing attractions a visitor could choose from:
- Lilliputia, an entire town of 300 midgets modeled on 16th century Nuremberg (only at half-scale) and featuring its own midget parliament, midget hotel, midget stables with midget ponies, Midget City Theater vaudeville shows, and midget fire department rushing off to put out imaginary fires at regularly scheduled intervals
- Fighting the Flames, an immersive spectacular which staged tenement fires every half hour and featured a cast of 2,000
- The Infant Incubator where real premature babies were put on public display, cared for by nurses behind a glass window and kept alive by a novel technology not yet available at hospitals
- The Bauer Sisters Candy Delicatessen where one could purchase “Sauer Kraut, Frankfurters, Pork Sausages…Meat Balls, Plum Pudding and a great many others too numerous to mention, all made of pure candy.”
- The Last Days of Pompeii, an extravaganza that combined historical vignette, theatre performance and a fireworks show in telling the story of the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius and of the destruction of Pompeii circa 79AD
- Orient, featuring the hanging gardens of Babylon, troupes of Indian performers, and a theater & museum with antiquities
- The Boer War, a recreation of pivotal moments in the recent war and starring 600 genuine Boer War veterans fresh from Johannesburg and performed in a 12,000-seat stadium
- The Galveston Flood, a a mechanical cyclorama dramatizing the Galveston flood which had killed 6,000 people only two years before
- The Temple of Palmistry
- A Trip to the Moon in which visitors take a trip to the moon by airship and are greeted upon arrival by midget moon men offering gifts of green cheese
- An enigmatic attraction named The House of Too Much Trouble
- The Insanitarium with Blowhole Theater, where clowns and midgets herded patrons with electric cattle prods, maneuvering women above jets of air which would blow their skirts up before an audience of park patrons
- Atlantis Under the Sea (see postcard above)
- Tilyou’s Dreamland Circus Side Show
- War of the World–aka The Great Naval Spectatorium–a war spectacular utilizing models & actors wherein 60 foreign ships attack New York City
- Monkey Music Hall, an “ape show” where 60 monkeys play in a band and allow peeks into their domestic life
- A recreation of a village of the head-hunting Bontac Tribe of the Philippines
- Streets of Delhi, a reproduction of a city street scene in India and Dubar of Delhi, in which 300 Indian natives in costume parade on elephants, camels, and horses
- Dragon’s Gorge, an indoor scenic railway with views of The River Styx and Hades (!!!), the North Pole, Africa, the Grand Canyon
- Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show
- Brownie’s Midget Theatre
- Crack of Doom, in which 1,000,000 gallons of water destroys a miniature mining town
- The Fall of Adrianople, a spectacular in which a Turkish city with mosques, bazaars, minarets & embattled castle is attacked and conquered by 1,800 invading Bulgarians, Serbs, Montenegrens, Greeks and Turks
- The Titanic Disaster, staged in 1914 and using miniatures of The Titanic and Carpathia to enact the principal events of the tragedy
- The Oriental Village with whriling dervishes, dancing girls, acrobats, camels & cafes serving Turkish coffee
(The Great Coney Island Spectacularium is an exhibition that aims to explore, celebrate, and evoke turn of the 20th Century Coney Island as the pinnacle of this kind of pre-cinematic immersive and spectacular amusement. The exhibition–a collaboration between Coney Island Museum Artist in Residence Joanna Ebenstein and Museum Director Aaron Beebe–will feature a combination of commissioned new works, curated antiquities, and installation and will premiere on Friday, April 8, 2011 in the Coney Island Museum.)
Filed under coney island american culture leisure amusement park 1900s
fuckyeahamericanhistory:
It’s LA week.
On this day in 1885, American inventor LaMarcus Adna “L.A.” Thompson patented the rollercoaster.
Pictured: the rollercoaster that needed patenting, Coney Island’s Switchback Railway, in 1884.
It’s Roller Coaster day!
Filed under history roller coaster lamarcus thompson coney island amusement park 1880s
This isn’t everything I love, but it is almost everything, combined in one photo. Especially the remodeled sign. Seriously considering buying a print for my office.
mudwerks:
The Tickler: 1909 | Shorpy Historic Photo Archive
Cincinnati circa 1909. “Chester Park — the Tickler.” Now “not as rough.” 8x10 inch dry plate glass negative, Detroit Publishing Company. View full size.
Filed under amusement park roller coaster cincinnati 1900s tickler virginia reel shorpy vaudeville american culture history
This is excellent. Never seen a photo of the inside before! via Shorpy
Filed under coney island amusement park shorpy fighting the flames american culture show
Filed under Kennywood pittsburgh amusement park 1950s postcard chromolithograph rockets
Here Joy Reigns Supreme.
Blackpool Pleasure Beach (at first I thought it might be Coney Island, but oh well…)
Filed under amusement park blackpool pleasure beach england funhouse the house of nonsense photo
Apparently the new Luna Park had an awesome opening weekend, as did everything else at Coney Island. Here’s hoping that it lasts and leads to bigger and better things, despite the plans to destroy the few remaining historic buildings on Surf Ave in a few weeks…
via Gothamist
Filed under coney island preservation amusement park luna park revitalization new york
“New York circa 1905. ‘The Miniature railway, Coney Island.’ 8x10 inch dry plate glass negative, Detroit Publishing Company.” via Shorpy
I’m such a sucker for Coney Island photos.
Filed under shorpy coney island 1900s amusement park new york
The entrance to Pittsburgh’s Luna Park, via Shorpy.
An approximation of this:
(via Nathan’s)
Later approximated by this:
(via Jody Brumage)
Filed under kennywood amusement park pittsburgh luna park coney island signs
oldhollywood:
Stills from Speedy (1928, dir. Ted Wilde) and a time when amusement parks were apparently less concerned about personal injury lawyers.
Filed under coney island steeplechase park amusement park 1920s film
I’m going to New York for the first time ever (I know…) this weekend. I also know that Coney Island looks nothing like this anymore, but it’s the one place I really want to go while I’m there.
Coney Island, New York, circa 1905. “Dreamland at twilight.” 8x10 inch dry plate glass negative, Detroit Publishing Company.
Via Shorpy
Filed under coney island dreamland amusement park 1900s new york photograph shorpy
No more free beer at Busch Gardens Williamsburg
“Busch Entertainment Corp. confirmed reports on Monday that it will no longer give free beer to its guests at its beer garden at Busch Gardens Williamsburg…Visitors of legal age will be able to buy beer at the parks, which will convert their beer sampling hospitality centers into cafes and restaurants, said Fred Jacobs, a spokesman for Busch Entertainment.”
So sad…
Filed under beer busch gardens disappointment amusement park