Friday, March 8, 2019

Where are they Now? A Retrospect on Worlds of Fun's Lost Rides

So many questions I often get from others and have asked myself countless times... is "what happened to x attraction?  I have found it is far easier to find out details of when something was added as opposed to when something was removed.  I also can't claim to always be right even in instances I think I might actually be right, for example for several years (many years ago) I thought Schussboomer was moved up to Adventureland in Iowa since the small compact coaster there seemed so similar.  I later found out those types of coasters were at one time a dime a dozen, and also found out... Star Screamer was a Galaxi, produced by a whole other company in a whole different country then Schussboomer was.  So with that being said take anything said below with at least a significant grain of salt.

Zambezi Zinger after it closed permanently at Worlds of Fun, ready to be removed...

I think all discussions in regards to what happened to Worlds of Fun attractions start with Zambezi Zinger.  Twenty-one years after its removal it is still one of, if not the most beloved attraction in Worlds of Fun's history.  It was obvious at the time of its removal that it wasn't being torn down but systematically removed, and when Jeff told me that it had been sold to a park in South America, the story made some sense.  We were finally able to announce the details of its permanent relocation in November 1998 on worldsoffun.org and that announcement is still online thanks to Wayback Machine.  https://web.archive.org/web/20000226022139/http://www.worldsoffun.org:80/nov3-98.html

Read more about Zambezi Zinger: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/zambezizinger.html

Zambezi Zinger as Montona Rusa at Parque Del Cafe in Monte Negro, Colombia.

Personally, I have to wonder if anyone at Worlds of Fun at the time believed Zinger would operate again.  Jeff was even told that the park that had bought it had originally intended to put the coaster back together with a cherry picker, which at first made it seem almost downright crazy to think the coaster would ever be in one piece again, let alone operate.  It is a tribute to Parque del Cafe, that not only did they prove at least a few people wrong, but to their credit Zinger still operates now over twenty years later.  Today it continues to operate known as Montana Rusa (Russian Mountain), in Parque Del Cafe in Montenegro, Colombia, South America.  I am hoping to have many photos to share with you of it down there soon!

But what about everything else?  Sky Hi, Cotton Blossom, Screamroller, Octopus, Omegatron, Safari, Orient Express, Finnish Fling, Schussboomer... and who knows how many others.  What happened to them?  Did any of them go on to another life somewhere else like Zinger?  Or did they go to the great scrapyard in the sky?  The answer is Yes and Yes.  So let's look at a few and to start, let's begin with the ride, at least for me, that started it all.  Ski Hi.



Sky Hi in Americana.  The letters from the station are currently in a private collection. We stored them for a few years and though I took photos specifically OF the letters, I have been unable to find them.  I do however have the photo above, in which you can see the "HI" in the background.

Sky Hi or Ski Heis depending on where you boarded was manufactured by Von Roll of Switzerland and was known as a Sky Ride 101, but you the reader probably remember it the way I did, as Worlds of Fun's skyway.  Guests rode in one of the twenty-five, four-seat, semi-enclosed cars that glided over 70' feet in the air above Americana and Scandinavia.  I only remember riding it once, but the image is burnt into my head.  By the '90s when I worked at the park it was a question whether it had even existed, in that as so often happens once a ride is removed, it seems to be quickly forgotten. (which is why this website even exists!)  At the time, the only details I remember seeing that told me that the ride had ever existed was the visible concrete footer that was at one time located in Europa by Autobahn (or Der Fender Bender at the time).  By the summer of 1996, I was dead set on trying to find any evidence that the ride had even existed and if the ride had had a name.  We all know the truth today.  So we know the ride existed, we know what it was called, we even have photos of it.  So what happened to it?


A Sky Hi car that was found just this last fall.

An old Ski Hi car at the park (this was taken in 2003 when Thunderhawk was under construction) I do not believe this car is located in the park any longer.

Here is where we leave the world of fact, and enter into the world of "maybe",  First we know Sky Hi was removed after the 1987 season, mid-1987 insurance adjusters, probably on edge from the accident at Six Flags Mid-America came into to examine Worlds of Fun's Sky Hi Cars.  Jeff was working at Le Taxi Tour at the time and had a friend of his who was the manager of Sky Hi also at the time,  kept calling him to report a new group of cars being condemned for surface rust.  At the end of the day, six cars were left to operate (out of the original twenty-five).  Worlds of Fun reached out to Six Flags to check out the cars from their defunct Von Roll 101 and found them in worse shape.  At this point, Worlds of Fun's condemned cars were mostly rounded up on a flatbed and taken to be scrapped.  Jeff barely missed out on a car as he was only minutes too late.  (dang it!).  I know at least one car was saved by the park as a cherry picker, and at least two cars went into private collections.  Now that's the cars.  Rumor has that many of the mechanical aspects of the ride may have gone to the Von Roll at the San Diego Zoo (which is still operating to this day).  The towers were removed during the 1987-88 offseason, while the concrete footers remained.  There were a total of four footers at one time, today two are still visible but you have to know where to look.  One is located near Mustang Runner sometimes sticking out of the grass in the center island.  The other is located just under lift one on Voyager, there was a third, near Autobahn that used to be visible until at least the mid-'90s, but was removed at some point in the late '90s. The large 3-foot wooden letters from the Ski Hi station were also saved and are currently in a private collection.  We did store the letters and several other park signs for a while, and we did take several photos of them, but after much searching... I have yet to find them.

An old park site plan that shows the location of the Ski Hi footer next to the exit of Der Fender Bender/Autobahn.


Before, note the Sky Hi support by Lift One of Viking Voyager

Today, the same location, the concrete pad is still there from the support.  This is viewable from Chickie and Pete's.

Read More about Sky Hi/Ski Heis: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/skyhi.html

If it seems like Sky Hi was parted out all over the place, you would be right and that so often happens when rides are removed.  Another great example is with Orient Express.  Though its removal is far more recent.  As most know, most of Orient Express was scrapped.  Not all of it was though.  Parts of the actual ride structure are still visible throughout the park, and I am not just talking about the "Chicken Exit" sign at Timber Wolf.

Chicken Exit sign from Orient Express inside the Timber Wolf station today.

There is a cherry picker "car", that usually sits by Timber Wolf and is still painted red, from the C-Block catwalk.  The three dragon logo heads were saved too, one is still in the General Manager's office at the park (this was the one on the outside of the station). The other two went to private collections these include the dragon head above the tunnel entrance and the dragon head from the ride queue line entranceway.

Orient Express dragon head from the exterior of the Orient Express station.  It is currently in the General Manager's office, but we were allowed to borrow it for the park's 40th-anniversary history display at Tivoli.

Here it is in its original location.


As most know the Orient Express station is still used as a haunt, Lore of the Vampire, but as some may not know the light poles around Spinning Dragons were recycled from Orient Express's queue line.  In addition, a small staircase, possibly from Express's lift hill is located near the unloading station on Viking Voyager.
Light poles in the Orient Express queue line.

The same (or one of the same) light poles today in the Spinning Dragons queue line.



This stairway has been moved around a little since this photo was taken, but if you click on the photo you can still plainly see the red steps from Orient Express.  


The last aspect of Express is the ride's three trains.  While it's likely most of the trains were parted out to various other operating Arrow coasters in the Cedar Fair chain, one lead car was saved, completely intact with its final season paint job and was donated to the National Roller Coaster Museum.  It is still currently on display at the National Roller Coaster Museum archives in Plainview Tx.  Another part of a car was used for the Extreme Home Makeover Season Two in 2005.

Kansas City Star Article from 2005 in regards to the Extreme Home Makeover.  By the way, it's Boomerang not Mamba.  


Lead car from a train on Orient Express on display and in storage at the National Roller Coaster Museum Archives in Plainview, Tx. 

Another Arrow also lives on in the park, and that's one of the park's original Arrow attractions, The Safari.  (the park opened with three attractions produced by Arrow Development, two are still operating, Viking Voyager and Le Taxi Tour).  The Safari was originally located where Prowler is today, but its queue house still stands and is still used by Zulu.  Safari was a "drive it yourself" ride similar to Taxis, but in this case, the cars were two-seat "safari car" themed.  Riders would drive slowly through a jungle-themed attraction complete with fiberglass animals.   The ride itself was removed after the 1978 season.  For a ride that has been gone now for forty years, you would say that there couldn't possibly be anything left from it.  Nope, there is quite a bit left and one that is still incredibly popular and still located in the park.  See those fiberglass animals were pretty well built, and after the ride was removed scattered throughout Africa.  I specifically remember the Hippo and Tiger.  There was another one though, a silverback gorilla that is still located, to this day in the African section of the park.  People love it, unaware of its long history with the park.


The African Gorilla, a 1973 original from The Safari attraction! 


That isn't it either.  At least two cars have survived too.  One is frequently on display at the Hunt Midwest Subtropolis, usually during its annual Ground Hog Run.  It looks to the normal observer like an unusual yellow golf cart, but like so many things first appearances are deceiving.  The other one is in a private collection. The last part of the Safari story is a part urban legend, and the story goes that after Safari was removed the remaining cars were buried and covered by what is now today K Lot.  (which didn't exist when the park first opened).  No one really knows if this is true or not, but it's fascinating none the less.

A Safari Car on display during the annual Groundhog Run, a friend of mine got a photo with it this last January, but this photo was taken in 2014. 

Read More about The Safari: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/safari.html

Since we are talking about Arrows lets continue that discussion with yet another Worlds of Fun Arrow, the Screamroller, or Extremeroller after 1983.  Screamroller was one of the most mass-produced coaster models at the time, the Arrow Corkscrew.  There are still several still operating throughout the United States and the world.  Screamroller was removed after the 1988 season and was replaced by Timber Wolf.   Being only twelve years old, Screamroller really wasn't all that old in terms of coasters and was sold, like Zinger, to a park halfway around the world, this time in Taiwan, known as Formosa Fun Coast.  It operated there until 2004 and was removed and left sitting in pieces in the park's parking lot for several more years before it was finally scrapped.  At Worlds of Fun Screamroller's memory is still alive now thirty-five years after it was removed.  Timber Wolf continues to use the exact same station, and the gates to the train still do not line up to the Timber Wolf trains, as they were designed for a completely different coaster.  Many of Screamroller's concrete footers are downright easy to see, one is located under the lift hill, another is located in the landscaping pond near Timber Wolf's brake run, hidden, somewhat under a few limestone landscaping rocks.


Footers from the Screamroller/Extremeroller both of these are next to the lift hill and are visible from the normal Timber Wolf exit.   Photos by Michael Parsons

Read More About Screamroller/Extremeroller: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1976/screamroller.html

Just like the Orient Express, Screamroller/Extremerollers trains didn't all go with it to its final location and resting place.  the fiberglass bodies and pods from the stand-up version, EXT, are actually in our possession.  We are still waiting and have attempted to find on numerous occasions an Arrow/Vekoma (they are identical), ride chassis so they can be put back together. Over the last two decades of trying we haven't had much luck though. Also, like Orient Express and many other attractions, the ride signs haven't entirely vanished, and are now in private collections too.

The EXT height requirement sign, which we stored along with the Sky Hi Letters for several years.

EXT fiberglass body and stand-up pods.

What about the smaller rides though?  Octopus, Finnish Fling, Omegatron, even Schussboomer?  Let's start with Schussboomer, a mid-size compact coaster located where Grand Carrousel is today Fascinating enough, the old Festhaus Picnic Pavilion, the one with the blue and white tent, also incorporated the original wooden Schussboomer queue house. What was left standing in 2010 was demolished to make way for Grand Carrousel.  Schussboomer as a fact was bought used, it was manufactured as a portable fair-style coaster, that could be moved from location to location so it was never permanently attached to the ground like most other coasters at Worlds of Fun have been and are.  It is known that Schussboomer was scrapped following its removal after the 1984 season.


In the background, you can see the Schussboomer queue house, which was re-used for the Festhaus Picnic Pavilion that you can see below.  The flag poles weren't removed immediately following Schussboomer's removal and lasted until at least 1994. 



Festhaus Picnic Pavilion entrance used the same wooden trellis, it was removed after the 2010 season and the Grand Carousel stands in its place today. 
Read more about Schussboomer: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/schussboomer.html


Octopus, Fling and Omegatron all share this dubious distinction of being scrapped after their removal at least partially.  Omegatron sat after its disassembly following the 2001 season, in the Oceans of Fun parking lot, it was finally, quite literally thrown in the dumpster along with Orient Express in 2003.  Octopus was the only ride in this list that wasn't thrown in its entirety in the dumpster.  Since its parent company is no longer producing parts, Octopus was "parted out" to the Monster at Valleyfair in Minneapolis, Mn.  (also owned by Cedar Fair)


An Omegatron car ready to be thrown in the dumpster, quite literally. (2003)


An Octopus car in our private collection.

Of course, not all of those smaller flat rides went to the dump or were parted out.  A few did go onto another life just like Screamroller and Zinger.  Wing Ding, Worlds of Fun's shortest-lived ride, only operating for two seasons (in 1979 and 1981), was sold by the park to a carnival circuit where it lives on even today, even though it is currently not operational.  It never even had its "Worlds of Fun" logo paint job removed!  

A car from Wing Ding in an undisclosed location

Another ride, is like Finnish Fling a recent removal, though unlike Fling it still operates to this day, and that is Le Carousel.  Added to Europa in 1979, Le Carousel was Europa's last addition until it's replacement Falcon's Flight was added in 2017.  Worlds of Fun sold the Bradley & Kaye Le Carousel to Carolyn's Country Cousins in nearby Liberty, Mo.  They renovated Le Carousel and it's still enjoyed by all ages who come to pick pumpkins, eat those awesome pumpkin donuts and ride the carousel!  

At Worlds of Fun...

At its new home, Carolyn's Pumpkin Patch.


The last attractions I'm going to look at in this editorial are probably the ones I have the least knowledge about in regards to their last resting places but are ones that are frequently asked about and that's Cotton Blossom and Victrix.  Cotton Blossom and Victrix were the park's two full-sized MGM props bought at the 1970 MGM Backlot auction, Cotton Blossom was from Show Boat and Victrix from All the Brothers Were Valiant (among many others).  Victrix was removed after the 1992 season, with Cotton Blossom's removal being after the 1995 season. Today Sea Dragon and Ripcord stand in their places respectively.

The outline of Victrix is still plain to see in the Sea Dragon lake, even when there is water present.

Both were made of wood, primarily, it's not hard to imagine how they went.  It's also fairly telling where their final resting place would be, which was the park dump.  It might be a bit morbid but I have thought about the last moments of Cotton Blossom on numerous occasions.  What is not easy to determine is the fate of the parts of each ship NOT made of wood.  Knowing what I know about the park... and how things easily vanish, especially for attractions that are obviously going to the cutting room floor, it doesn't take any imagination to determine that not everything went to the dump.  In fact, Jeff and I have a steel cleat from Cotton Blossom, which attests to the fact that someone, and probably several someones scavenged parts from one or both ships while, or just before they were demolished. I have heard that someone saved the Cotton Blossom sign, the one that went between the two smokestacks.  I don't know who, and I don't know where it is. (and I wish I did)  Like Sky Hi's concrete footers still remaining the base for both the Cotton Blossom and Victrix still, exist.  When the Sea Dragon lake is drained it's still easy to see the outline of the Victrix keel (you can also see if the water is clear).



A little difficult to see, but if you look to the left of the loading dock in the water you can see the grid pattern that was the foundation of Cotton Blossom.  Today, this is no longer visible.

Back when Cotton Blossom and the park was under construction in 1972/73, this is that same grid pattern foundation under construction.

Read More about Cotton Blossom: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/cottonblossom.html

Until a few years ago you could also see the outline of the original Cotton Blossom support, but with the lake being re-lined, it is currently impossible to be able to see any longer.  Hopefully someday, like so many other things discussed in this article, we will know the location of many of the park's artifacts.  Someone asked a few days ago if I knew what happened to the Flying Dutchman sign, hoping that it hung in someone's bar somewhere.  I know for a fact that in probably more than just a few cases park signs and artifacts have and are being used for decorative purposes. This is why I continue to hope that while the rides and attractions themselves may be long gone, their memories are not all that are left to us.








Monday, December 31, 2018

2019: A New Year of Anniversaries!

Usually, New Year's Eve is a non-entity for Worlds of Fun fans, in the forty-five years of the park’s existence, the park has been as quiet as a field mouse on December 31, until this year.  Of course this year the park is doing some decidedly different.  It’s open!  It will enter into 2019 not dark and somber, but full of life, lights, fireworks, and people (hopefully).  This made me think that this made for a perfect time for a blog.  But I couldn’t figure out what type of blog, until I realized that this New Years Eve brought in the new year, 2019.  And with 2019, came a whole host of anniversaries for the park.  If CP Food Blog won’t mind me borrowing their idea, I do believe that this last day of 2018 makes for a perfect introduction to the multitude of park anniversaries for the upcoming year.  This is one of the few years that there will be an EXISTING attraction celebrating an anniversary for almost every five-year mark from 1974 going forward.

The Inspirational Article:



Five Years 2014- Current 

SteelHawk

Believe it or not… Steelhawk is officially five years old in 2019.  If that makes you feel old… well, I am only just getting started.  Steelhawk was manufactured by Mondial of the Netherlands and opened on July 2, 2014.  It was then and still is now at 301’ feet tall the tallest attraction in the park, and offers an exhilarating, and sometimes quite cold and windy experience high above the park.  As most know its history I won’t repeat too much of it here except to remind everyone that Steelhawk was originally known as Windseeker prior to it’s move from Knott’s Berry Farm to Worlds of Fun.  Fascinating enough Steelhawk also stands where the original main Americana gate was located and the entrance walkway to Steelhawk once served as the entrance walkway into the park.

Steelhawk Blogs:
03/28/2014: Worlds of Fun Off-Season Tour (Steelhawk Construction)




Ten Years 2009 - Current 

Prowler

It’s amazing to me that Prowler is now ten years old.  It doesn’t feel like that long ago.  It too didn’t open on opening day, this big cat preferred May instead (Prowler opened May 2, 2009).  It is famous locally for its great night rides and perfectly timed on ride photo flash.  It also, like all good Worlds of Fun coasters, is famous nationally for being voted the best new attraction for 2009.  So much so that once again like all good Worlds of Fun coasters, was at least partially cloned at Kings Island (Mystic Timbers).  Makes one wonder why King’s Island likes to clone Worlds of Fun coasters as this is its second go around doing that?  (Vortex is a near clone of Orient Express). I think with Kings Island photocopying Worlds of Fun so much that turn around is fair play, what do you think?




Prowler like its semi-clone Mystic Timbers was a creation of Great Coasters International or as it is usually referred to as GCI.  GCI had been known since its inception for its fabulous twister coasters, or coasters that as the name implies cross over themselves countless times.  Thunderhead for example at Dollywood has a total of 32 crossovers.  Prowler was quite different with a total of only four, creating an odd sort of GCI creation more in line with a traditional Out and Back coaster (Mamba is a great example of an Out and Back).  The funny part of all of this is that on a dark night it's almost impossible to tell where the coaster is headed, and a friend of ours who rode the coaster for the first time on a dark night during the American Coaster Enthusiasts 2009 Convention stated upon exiting that he "really didn't like those twister coasters".  Suffice it to say... Prowler wasn't and isn't a twister, but it was so dark he couldn't even tell.  The sign of a great coaster.

Prowler Construction Blogs:
10/20/2008: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2008/10/welcome-to-new-dot-org-blog.html
10/26/2008: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2008/10/welcome-back-folks-to-blog-post-numero.html
11/13/2008: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2008/11/so-jeff-and-i-made-plans-today-to-go.html
01/08/2009: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2009/01/prowler-construction-01082009.html
01/22/2009: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2009/01/prowler-construction-tower-01222009.html
03/26/2009: https://unwof.blogspot.com/2009/03/prowler-construction-tour-03262009.html




Fifteen Years 2004 - Current 

Spinning Dragons

There are a lot of coasters having anniversaries this year… mostly due to the fact that over a period of a decade the park added five different coasters (and removed two).  Spinning Dragons was the first coaster opening that I actually rode on its opening day, which once again wasn’t Worlds of Fun’s opening day, it was April 17th instead.  Spinning Dragons was a replacement filling the void at the park for the family-style coaster, and is still quite popular since it is the only coaster other than Cosmic Coaster (a rocket with feet), that allows guests under 48” to ride.  Guests can ride Spinning Dragons at 43” as long as they are accompanied by a responsible person...  As most also know Spinning Dragons was a twin birth by the folks at Gerstlauer Amusement Rides of Germany with its twin opening a few months earlier at the then Camp Snoopy at Mall of America (today Nickelodeon Universe)



Twenty Five Years - 1994 -Current 

Sea Dragon

I was 16 in summer 1994 and Worlds of Fun was not only my first job, but Sea Dragon was also the brand new ride that year.  I not only operated it but I also characteristically, for me that is, called operations office freaking out that guests were going to fly out of the swinging ship.  Give a 16-year-old a break as for those that ride it there is a lot of airtime in those last rows!  Sea Dragon was one of Hunt Midwest’s last additions to the park, and in many ways “replaced” the Victrix which had been removed after the 1992 season.  Sea Dragon was also one of Chance Rides last “Sea Dragon” themed swing ship rides.  After that year Chance switched to the Pharoah’s Fury theme on their swinging ships. Chance Rides today is still in business and still manufacturing the Pharoah’s Fury swinging ship in nearby Wichita, Ks.



Thirty Years 1989 - Current 

Timber Wolf

Timber Wolf… there are some that will say that the Timber Wolf of today bears no resemblance to the Timber Wolf of 1989.  But we're not going to argue that point as wooden coasters by their very nature are temperamental beings.  I always like to say that my real interest in Worlds of Fun started with Timber Wolf, it was at that point that I started to watch for the commercials every spring, and those that were around during that marketing campaign know exactly what I am talking about.  The most amazing thing to me though right now about Timber Wolf is that we are discussing not its 20th, not its 25th but its 30th anniversary.  The big THREE-OH.  Timber Wolf is now not only officially “over the hill” but It has as of 2019 made it six years longer than any other Worlds of Fun coaster in the history of the park.  With its new turn (which replaced the old 560 degree helix), I think it’s gotten a new lease on life, and I think it will see several more 5-year anniversary marks before it runs off into the wilderness.

Timber Wolf Blogs
03/10/2010: With a Wolf Howl
04/01/2014: 25 Years of Running Wild with Timber Wolf
05/31/2018: The New and Improved Timber Wolf: A Review




Thirty-Five Years - 1984 - Current 

Fury of the Nile

Timber Wolf might be the ride I remember because of its commercials but the fact is I didn’t even ride it until 2004.  On the other hand, the ride that I remember riding every time I went to Worlds of Fun when I was a kid and a teenager is also still there and that’s Fury of the Nile.  I still remember the hot sun, the line snaking all the way down that long queue line, and by the time you made it “almost” there, to that bridge that covers the turntable… the turntable was running so fast in those years it would cause that bridge to vibrate.  Everything was amazingly memorable about that ride, the geysers which seemed to be everywhere, the rapids and the long, seemingly never-ending dark tunnel at the end.  Nile was also of true Worlds of Fun lineage, in that it was the largest river rapids ride in the world at the time, built by Intamin AG of Switzerland.  Nile also introduced new technology to the world of rapids rides including the first ever turntable loading station, and water storage that was built into the ride itself (under the lift), not necessitating what I like to refer to as an “ugly lake” that many rapids rides have to this day.  Nile has so many great stories its hard to pick just one,  but I always personally loved how in the years preceding the now massive event that is Halloween Haunt, Nile was always dyed “red” (more like a dirty pink) and called Fury of the “bloody” Nile.  I can’t even remember when they stopped doing that, but you know I kind of miss those small touches.



Forty Years - 1979 - Current 

Zulu

It has been said that the German’s really known how to engineer their rides, (among other things), and like Spinning Dragons, Zulu is German made, by Huss Manufacturing (pronounced WHOSE).  Zulu is what is known as an Enterprise, and Huss was the second company to produce a ride by that name, Anton Schwartzkopf (also of Germany) produced the first version, and the two rides were incredibly similar.  Zulu is properly named, it was in 1979 and still is today one incredibly intense ride, and for that reason, it is the only ride in this list that I have not, and will not ride.  I’ve heard too many stories about trails leading around the ride and to the bathroom nearby, and I am not talking about trails of breadcrumbs either.  There has been a great deal of worry about Zulu over recent years due to rehabs throughout the operating season, and also the simple fact that Cedar Point, Worlds of Fun’s monstrous sister park in Ohio just removed their Huss Enterprise after the 2018 season (Witches Wheel).  For today though, and into 2019 Zulu is still with us, and hopefully will continue to be with us for many years to come.  I still won’t ride it though.

Zulu Blogs:
04/12/2017: It's A Flat World After All?



Forty-Five Years - 1974 - Current 

Red Baron and Forum

Sometimes it’s easy to forget that the park turned forty-five years old in 2018, so it would only be proper that the next year, 2019 we would celebrate the forty-fifth anniversary of the first new attractions added to the park in its second season.  That would include the Red Baron children’s ride and the Forum Amphitheater.  Forum, or as it was re-named in 1999 the Heart of America Theater, is sadly probably on its last few seasons.  It had an amazing run, if not one of the most amazing runs of any attraction at the park, hosting hundreds if not thousands of concerts, from its first on June 16th, 1974, the Harper Valley PTA, to its last major concert in 1997.  I still remember coming to the park as a child with my mom who wanted to see Lee Greenwood and waiting camped out in front of the Forum Amphitheater for good seats.  During the 1980s and even into the ’90s the Forum was the bread and butter of park attendance.  It was sad then to wait in line for the Bloodshed attraction at Haunt this year and see the faded paint reminding those long ago concertgoers not to sit on the concrete walkways.  Let us not be sad though, let us instead remember the memories from it, and recall those while the Forum still exists for 2019.



The other attraction celebrating it’s 45th anniversary this year is a rather small one, but though it be small it be mighty and that’s the Red Baron.  Yes, that little airplane ride in Planet Snoopy is one of the park’s oldest operating attractions, opening in 1974 in the Scandinavian section of the park, and moving to its current location in 1978 with the addition of the Aerodrome.  Details and even its paint job and name have changed over the years but Red Baron itself really hasn’t.  A thought I like to think about is that kids that first rode it when it opened in the 1970s are now old enough to not only have children of their own but now even grandchildren, making this one ride that quite possibly can be said to have been ridden by three different generations.

Saturday, December 8, 2018

Hiding in Plain Sight



Henrietta in 1973 (from the 1974 Photobook).


About a week ago I posted a photo of Henrietta in the snow back when the park was still under construction in early 1973. That photo started a discussion on what happened to Henrietta, and started the wheels turning for a blog specifically about her.  As most know Worlds of Fun was home to three full-size ships when it first opened in 1973, Cotton Blossom from MGM’s 1951 “Show Boat”, Victrix from MGM’s 1953 “All the Brothers were Valiant” and last but not least, Henrietta.  Unlike the other two, Henrietta was not an actual model purchased from MGM, it was, however, based on the actual Henrietta from the 1956 version of “Around the World in 80 Days”.  In fact, it's easy to tell when one watches’ the scenes from the movie that the ship at Worlds of Fun was only very loosely based on the actual ship from the movie itself, with only a few identifying elements being copied such as the side paddlewheel and smokestack, along with, of course, the name.


Screenshot from "Around the World in 80 Days"

When the park opened in 1973, until the Americana main gate closed for good at the end of the 1998 season, millions of guests would start and end their day at Worlds of Fun by crossing the gangplank of Henrietta.  It, along with the entire Americana gate complex was almost an afterthought to the guests running for the Zinger, or Screamroller or Orient Express which were, rightfully, the stars of the show.  Very few thought to take pictures of Henrietta or the Main Gate, that was until we all realized it was going away for good, and like so many things in life one ever knows what one is losing until it's gone forever.  With the removal of the gate in 1998 and the addition of the pay extra Grand Prix Raceway Go Karts, Henrietta was the last of the ships to go, following Victrix’s removal in 1993 and Cotton Blossom in 1995.  Or was it?

Construction of Henrietta, you can see the concrete keel in the approximate center of the photo.
Henrietta as she appeared in the late 80's/early 90's, photo by Jeff Merritt.

Henrietta, because it was only half wood, and the rest concrete wasn’t so easy to get rid of, and when the park opened back up in 1999 it was obvious that the park decided not to simply remove the ship and bulldoze over the site as if it had never existed in the first place, but simply only removed anything that looked like a ship choosing to leave the basic structure intact.  The pointed bow deck, the stern (rear) nameplate, the rigging, the sidewheeler, and the smokestack were all gone.  Yet the old counter and covered awning remained.  Instead of being used as Guests Relations, or Par-A-Scope photo, it became the ticket booth for the Grand Prix Raceway.  I remember visiting the interior when I worked at the park in 2008 and was sent from Patriot to Grand Prix, seeing the old miniature wooden boxes and pegs on the wall that still existed from when it was used for souvenir photos, reminding me of the once grand past of what had become simply an ordinary wooden box.  


Henrietta in 1998, the last season before it was "removed"


Starting with the 1999 season the Scandinavian gate went from being a back gate to the ONLY gate.  Due to its design, it lacked any "opening act" show factor that both the old Americana Gate, and new Scandinavia gate today evoke.  This created a new trend for Worlds of Fun fans, who started taking their guests to Americana and passing over the still existing entrance/exit bridges to “properly” enter the park.  I remember quite vividly showing a visiting friend from Florida the outline of where the sidewheel paddlewheel once was, which was still visible at the time (it is no longer so).

Henrietta during the 1999 Season, you can easily see the ship's concrete bow, the white structure above is also re-used from the Henrietta.

Even now when I pass by what I refer to as "what is left of Henrietta" (for lack of better description) I can't help but remember my personal memories associated with her and there are several.  Crossing it every week to enter the park as a guest after I got off work there in 1994, while I waited for my mom to pick me up. In 1998, I met Jeff, who would later become my husband for the very first time in front of the Henrietta.  My dad would even come out a few times and on one occasion would point out that when he worked at the park in 1973 (on Cotton Blossom’s Paddlewheel Cafe), he remembered that guests would not exit over Henrietta like they would for years afterward, but instead down walkways that were off to the side.   The walkways themselves are of course long gone, but the light pole, poised at an angle next to Grandma’s Funnel Cakes, still stands as a reminder of how even only one year into park operation, Worlds of Fun was in a constant state of change.


The original "box" structure has been demolished in this photo from early 2014, with Steelhawk under construction in the background.

2014 saw the addition of Steelhawk, to replace the Grand Prix Raceway.  Though its movement from Knott's Berry Farm generated some questions, its addition to Worlds of Fun was almost flawless, especially popular since it replaced the decidedly unpopular Grand Prix Raceway.  The addition of Steelhawk also saw further changes to the remnants of Henrietta.  The original box-like structure was bulldozed and replaced by a Coca-Cola Freestyle structure.  The metal guard rails that were added with Grand Prix were, thankfully, removed and left the two bridges in their semi-original style, with the dock-style pylons still intact.  The park attempted to cover the old concrete boat keel with soil and stone, and added a rather adorable themed creek bed.  But even well-intentioned though it was, Henrietta’s keel seems almost relentless in its ability to still be visible even today.  

An attempt to cover up the boat-shaped keel.  



As we have seen, Worlds of Fun for twenty years did almost everything in their power to make Henrietta vanish.  A proposition that was probably more successful than not simply because most park visitors on their walk to Steelhawk will never realize they are crossing the bow of a ship, or the old park gate.  It's ironic then, that after twenty years of seemingly wishing to forget, the park is now not only recognizing that Henrietta did exist but creating a restaurant in tribute to it and the two other large landmarks that used to call the park home, Cotton Blossom and Victrix.  Boathouse Grill will open with the 2019 season near the original locations of the Cotton Blossom and Henrietta, a fantastic tribute to not only the ships themselves but the memories they helped create.  




Henrietta served as the host for the 1974 Grand Opening Ceremonies.  You can see one of the original bridges in the foreground, which still exists and looks pretty much about the same to this day.

More Information on the park's three iconic ships can be found here:





Henrietta/Main Americana Gate: http://www.worldsoffun.org/1973/henrietta.html