Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel Number 15 Explained

Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel Number 15
Built:1907
Architect:Zoller, Leo; Philadelphia Toboggan Co.
Added:June 8, 2001
Refnum:01000583

Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel Number 15 was a carousel built in 1907 by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company and moved several times. Since 2009, it has been in storage in Portland, Oregon.[1] It measured in diameter and has a 26foot center pole. It had 56 jumping horses carved from basswood in four rows.[2]

The carousel was originally set up at Fort George Amusement Park in Fort George, New York. In 1917, after the park had been closed for several years, the carousel moved to the new Summit Beach Amusement Park in Akron, Ohio. In 1958, Summit Beach closed and the carousel moved to State Fair Park in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and later to DandiLion Park in Muskego, Wisconsin, where it remained until the park closed in 1976. In 1986, it was moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, for Expo '86. In 1990, the carousel was moved to the Puente Hills Mall in City of Industry, California. In 1998, The carousel was moved and reinstalled one last time in 1998 to the newly opened Palisades Center Mall in West Nyack, New York. In May 2009, mall management announced that the carousel would be disassembled and removed by June 14, 2009.[3] In fall 2009, the carousel was replaced with a modern, two-floor, Venetian carousel made by Bertazzon of Italy and owned by Island Carousels.

The carousel was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, removed in 1984 when it was moved outside the United States, and readded in 2001.

Notes and References

  1. http://carouselcorner.net/Articles/carouselnewsandtrader/Carousel_News_and_Trader_BW_Borrelli_JUNE_2010.pdf
  2. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration: Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel Number 15. January 2001. 2010-05-28 . Jean Skinner and John A. Bonafide. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. See also: Web site: Accompanying 10 photos.
  3. http://www.nypost.com/seven/08272009/news/regionalnews/palisades_center_replaces_historic_carou_186760.htm PALISADES CENTER REPLACES HISTORIC CAROUSEL - New York Post - August 27, 2009