Got into a discussion about the oldest theme park in america tonight, said that I believed Cedar Point is the second oldest, but wasn't sure about the oldest. So after looking quite a few places state that Lake Compounce is the oldest. Began in 1895. However in looking at cedar point history, people began using the island for swimming in the 1870's, Grand Pavilion was erected in 1888, and Switchback Railway was installed in 1892. Making it easily older than Lake Compounce.
My Question to you :
What is America's oldest theme/amusement park?
I believe that Knotts berry farm is the oldest "theme park".
Lake compounce is an amusement park....not a theme park.
what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard.
Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it.
I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
If knotts is not the oldest theme park, somebody better tell them. It's right there in big print on knotts web site here....... http://www.knotts.com/
"The success of the chicken dinners was immediate and by 1940 the restaurant was serving as many as 4,000 dinners on Sunday evenings. To give waiting customers something to do and to pay homage to the pioneering spirit of his grandparents and his love of the Old West, Walter developed Ghost Town, eventually the first of Knott's Berry Farm's six themed areas."
In 1940 , knotts added it's first(and oldest) section of the theme park.
The history of the park can be found here...... http://www.knotts.com/public/news/history/index.cfm
what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard.
Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it.
I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Knott's and Holiday World have both claimed to be the oldest operating "theme park" in the U.S. for as long as I can remember. While it's true that Knott's had attractions, shows and an elborately themed area in the 1940s there were no rides until the early 50s. So we have to ask--was it really a theme park in the 1940s or just a heavily themed roadside attraction?
Since most park enthusiasts associate "themed amusement park" with rides, I'm guessing most enthusiasts (but I have no empirical data) recognize Holiday World as the country's oldest theme park.
As I recall the only "ride" that Santa Claus Land had when it opened was the train , although I can't confirm that it was actually in service when the park opened in the late summer of 1946. Knotts started givng rides on the Butterfield Stage Coach in 1949, followed by the building of the Ghost Town & Calico RR in 1951. Bud Hurlbut began his long association with the Knott family in 1955 with the installation of his Gustav Dentzel carousel (former Hershey Park machine).
Now the key word that has been brought up is "rides" , plural. I don't think that either one of them had more than one major ride untill the early 1950's. A roadside attraction (which both of them were initally) with a single ride a theme park does not make.
Dutchman said:
As I recall the only "ride" that Santa Claus Land had when it opened was the train , although I can't confirm that it was actually in service when the park opened in the late summer of 1946.
According to HW's website they opened with "a toy shop, toy displays, themed children’s rides, a restaurant, and, of course, Santa Claus."
Note that rides is plural. It may have been small, but I think at this point although it was a themed children's park, it was nonetheless a theme park.
Knott's officially was a theme park in 1940 (where themed Ghost Town attractions and horse-carriage rides first popped up), although it originated in the 1920's as a Berry Stand.
Holiday World did not open until 6 years later. So Knott's is America's first theme park.
Key word is theme park.
Obviously, Knott's is not the oldest amusement park. Those go WAYYYY back.
Fun said:
My theme park is older than your theme park.
Exactly what I was thinking. I kind of wish that I said that. lol
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
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