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300,000. Area. 52 acres (210,000 m 2) Entrance to Enchanted Forest Amusement Park in 1987. The Sliding Board in 1987. The Enchanted Forest was a theme park in Ellicott City, Maryland, on U.S. Route 40 (Baltimore National Pike) near the intersection with Bethany Lane. Other theme parks with the same name have since opened elsewhere.
New York. Interior of Luna Park, Coney Island at night, 1905. Electric tower in the foreground. New York, United States of America. Dreamland tower and lagoon, Brooklyn, 1907. The steeplechase ride, Steeplechase Park, Coney Island, New York, United States of America. Amusement park.
Riverview Park (Baltimore) Categories: Amusement parks in Maryland. Defunct amusement parks in the United States by state or territory. History of Maryland.
Glen Echo Park is an arts and cultural center in Glen Echo, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C. Located about 9 miles (14 km) northwest of the city's downtown area, the park's site was initially developed in 1891 as a National Chautauqua Assembly. Following the foreclosure and sale of the Chautauqua grounds in 1903, leisure facilities were ...
Disney, Six Flags, and even the Flintstones have had amusement parks that succumbed to disasters, bad press, and shifting entertainment markets. But for the adventurous, abandoned theme parks ...
Electric Park was a 24-acre (97,000 m 2) amusement park in Baltimore, Maryland, located near the intersection of Belvedere Avenue and Reisterstown Road. [1] A trolley park that originally opened as a racetrack for harness racing, [2][3][4] It opened in 1896, closed in 1915 and was razed in 1916. Electric Park's primary attractions were the ...
Gwynn Oak Park. Gwynn Oak Park is a park that was the site of a privately owned amusement park, located in the community of Gwynn Oak, just outside northwest Baltimore, Maryland, in Baltimore County. The 64-acre (260,000 m 2) park is at the corner of Gwynn Oak and Gwyndale avenues, about a quarter mile off of Liberty Heights Avenue.
Dreamland, St Kilda (1906–1909) – the park's Figure Eight rollercoaster remained in operation until 1914; the site is home to Luna Park, Melbourne today. Hi-Lite Park, Geelong (1956–1985) Kinkuna Country Fun and Fauna Park, Lakes Entrance. Leisureland Fair, Langwarrin (1984–1992) Rosebud Fun and Picnic Park, Rosebud.