- Comet (Lincoln Park)
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Comet Location Lincoln Park (Dartmouth, Massachusetts) Coordinates 41°38′10″N 71°02′35″W / 41.636170°N 71.043162°WCoordinates: 41°38′10″N 71°02′35″W / 41.636170°N 71.043162°W Status Abandoned Opened October 1946 Closed September 29, 1987 Type Wood Manufacturer National Amusement Device Company Designer Edward Leis, Vernon Keenan Lift/launch system Chain lift Height 65 ft (20 m) Length 3,000 ft (910 m) Max speed 55 mph (89 km/h) Duration 2:20 Comet at RCDB Pictures of Comet at RCDB Amusement Parks Portal The Comet was a twister-layout wooden roller coaster that operated in the now defunct Lincoln Park in Massachusetts. It operated from 1946 until 1987. It continues to rot away as time passes by.
History of The Comet
The coaster was designed by Edward Leis and Vernon Keenan and built by the National Amusement Device Company. The ride was 3000 feet long, and had a top speed of 55 mph. One ride lasted two minutes and ten seconds. It had two trains, each with five cars, arranged with two per row, two rows per car, for a total of 20 riders per train.
The coaster was originally designed with five cars, but during the last years of its operation, the ride was shortened to four to allow the last carts to be used for spare parts. The ride continues to stand, though it's lifthill has been partially collapsed as of 2005. As of the winter of 2008, the Comet's station building has completely collapsed. The cause was most likely the result of either heavy snow or just rot.
Possible Rebirth
The trains of the ride were purchased by Little Merrick Amusement Park when the ride closed. Merrick also expressed interest buying the coaster in 2002. The owner of Lincoln Park at the time, Walter Bronhard, offered to sell the coaster for $90,000, but received no buyers. Various preservation efforts were made to save the coaster, but as of January 2005 when the coaster's lift had partially collapsed, the efforts had generally been abandoned. Instead, A-Merrick-A expressed that it would probably build an exact replica of the ride though the status of this plan is currently unknown.
External links
Categories:- Wooden roller coasters
- National Amusement Device Company roller coasters
- Roller coasters in Massachusetts
- Roller coasters introduced in 1946
- Defunct roller coasters
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