Pretzel Amusement Ride Company Explained

Pretzel Amusement Ride Company
Industry:Amusement Rides
Fate:Defunct
Founded:1928
Founder:Leon Cassidy and Marvin Rempfer
Defunct:1979
Hq Location City:Bridgeton, New Jersey, U.S.
Hq Location Country:United States
Key People:Bill Cassidy
Products:The Pretzel

The Pretzel Amusement Ride Company was an amusement ride manufacturer that produced a variety of rides, including an early dark ride known as The Pretzel, the company's namesake. It built over 1400 rides for carnivals and amusement parks.

Name

The company took its name from its trademark dark ride, The Pretzel, so called because of its track's winding, pretzel-like layout.[1] It may also have been influenced by the comment of someone who rode the ride's prototype: "It felt like I was turned and twisted like a pretzel".

History

The company was established in 1928 when founders Marvin Rempfer and Leon Cassidy patented a single-rail dark ride[2] they built in Tumbling Dam Park on the banks of Sunset Lake in Bridgeton, New Jersey. The company remained in Bridgeton throughout its existence.

A large heavy pretzel design was originally affixed to the front of each car to prevent it from flipping backwards. In 1929, a standard Pretzel ride had five cars, 350 feet of track, a riding time of one and a half minutes, and sold for $1,200.

Portable pretzel rides for carnivals weighed about 9 tons. They were transported on huge moving vans. For the first three decades, Pretzel rides were single story. Beginning in the 1950s, two-story "double decker" rides were also made whose cars were hoisted to the second story by a lift chain during the ride. Leon Cassidy was not in favor of the double-decker version. The Mad Giant was 17 tons, 40'x 8' on trailer, and 70'x30' when opened, and took about five hours to set up. Pretzel also made spinning rides, including a famous one for Coney Island.

Leon's son William Cassidy ran the company after his father. He sold the rights to build the rides in 1979.

List of rides

Pretzel rides were usually themed. They included The Caveman, Haunted House, Lost Mine, Gold Nugget, Thunderbird Jr. Ride, Toonerville Trolley, Whirlo, Kiddie Circus, Devil's Cave/Pirate's Cove/Bucket O' Blood (the same ride rethemed), Devils Inn, Winter Wonderland, Orient Express, Mad Giant, Laff in the Dark, Laff in the Dark with spinning cars, Laffland, Pirates Cave, Pirates Den, Paris After Dark, Arabian Nights Tunnel of Love/Casper's Ghostland, Treasure Island, Spook-A-Rama, Le Cachot/Safari/Zoomerang, and three versions of Dante's Inferno.

NameLocationRef(s)
Haunted MansionKnoebel's Amusement Resort
Haunted PretzelBushkill Park
Pretzel RideBlackpool Pleasure Beach
The PretzelBay Shore Park
The PretzelHersheypark
ZoomerangKennywood
SafariKennywood
Le CachotKennywood
The PretzelConneaut Lake ParkUnknown
Devil's DenConneaut Lake Park
Haunted HouseCamden Park
LafflandSylvan Beach Amusement Park
Laff in the DarkKiddieland Amusement Park (Birmingham, AL)
Spook-a-RamaDeno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park
Keansburg Mystery HouseKeansburg Amusement Park
Spook HouseKeansburg Amusement Park
Ghost TrainLagoon Amusement Park
SpooksHouseEldridge Park
Ghost TrainLuna Park Melbourne

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Coleman, John P. . Historic Amusement Parks of Baltimore: An Illustrated History . McFarland . April 28, 2016 . 26 . [The Pretzel] received its name from the ride's twisted curving layout that guests navigated in the dark. .
  2. Web site: Luca . Bill . William Cassidy and The Pretzel Amusement Ride Company . Send 'em Out Laffing . 22 October 2011 .