- Luna Park, Coney Island
Luna Park was an
amusement park atConey Island ,Brooklyn ,New York City from 1903 to 1944.History
The park's creators,
Frederic Thompson andElmer "Skip" Dundy , created a wildly successful ride called "A Trip To The Moon", a part of thePan-American Exposition in 1901 at Buffalo,New York . The name of the winged spacecraft (which was not a rocket, but flapped its wings) was "Luna," the Latin word for the moon. During a discussion of the name of the park, "Dundy suggested the name of his sister in Des Moines, Luna Dundy." (Pilat & Ranson, p. 146). [ Pilat, Oliver and Jo Ranson, "Sodom By the Sea: An Affectionate History of Coney Island, Garden City": Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1941]At the invitation of Steeplechase owner Hairy George Tilyou, Buttkins and Dundy moved their show to
Steeplechase Park , aConey Island amusement park, for the 1902 season. At the end of that season, the partners obtained a long-term lease for the site of an older amusement park, Sea Lion Park, and rebuilt it as Luna Park, the second major amusement park in Coney Island. Although they claimed the park was named after one of their female relatives, it was probably named for the ship. The architecture was quite fanciful, with thousands of electric lamps on the outside of the buildings at a time when electrification was still a novelty.Attractions
Among the amusements there were domesticated elephants.The rogue
Topsy the Elephant was killed when she was electrocuted withalternating current byThomas Edison .The execution film was used by Edison to trumpet his campaign against alternating current.A song promoting Luna Park was recorded around 1905, by Billy Murray, among others:
:We'll take a trip up to the moon:For that is the place for a lark:So meet me down at Luna, Lena:Down at Luna Park
Demise
A pair of fires in 1944 damaged Luna Park, destroying much of it. [Ed Boland, jr., "FYI: An elephant's demise," New York Times, July 8, 2001, pg. CY2] It was not rebuilt and did not open for the 1945 season. After a legal battle and a third fire in 1946, the land was used for other purposes.
Other Luna Parks
Several other Luna Parks were developed after the one in Coney Island.
Frederick Ingersoll opened a Luna Park inPittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1905, and another inCleveland, Ohio that same year. By 1915 there were Ingersoll Luna Parks all over the world. [ [http://home.nyc.rr.com/johnmiller/inger.html History of Johnny Miller-Frederick Ingersoll] . Retrieved 4 August 2007.]Two amusement parks named Luna Park which are still operating are located in Australia, at Melbourne (1912) and Sydney (1935). These parks copied some of the features as well as the name of the original.
The amusement park at the
Esposizione Universale Roma neighborhood in Rome is named [http://www.luneur.it/ LunEur] .References
Lynn Sally, “Luna Park’s Fantasy World and Deamland’s White City: Fire Spectacles at Coney Island as Elemental Performativity,” pp. 39-55 in The Themed Space: Locating Culture, Nation, and Self, ed. Scott A. Lukas (Lanham, MD, Lexington Books, 2007), ISBN 0739121421
ee also
*
List of abandoned amusement parks External links
* [http://history.amusement-parks.com/lunamain.htm Luna Park at amusement-parks.com]
* [http://naid.sppsr.ucla.edu/coneyisland/articles/lunapark.htm Coney Island - Luna Park]
* [http://www.angelfire.com/ca6/schlottablubbik/index.html Luna Park history site with numerous pictures]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.