Wonderland Amusement Park
Shoot the Chutes at Wonderland Amusement Park
LocationMinneapolis
Coordinates44°56′47″N 93°13′32″W / 44.946346°N 93.225690°W / 44.946346; -93.225690
StatusDefunct
Opened1905 (1905)
Closed1911 (1911)
OwnerH. A. Dorsey
Operating seasonlate May through early September

Wonderland was an amusement park that operated in the Longfellow neighborhood of Minneapolis from 1905 through 1911.[1] The ten-acre site was located between Lake Street and 32nd Street and 31st and 33rd Avenues.[2]

Attractions

A 120-foot tower, lit by thousands of electric lights, was Wonderland's focal point and could be seen from a distance of five miles.[3] Among the other attractions were a scenic railway (roller coaster), old mill, carousel and house of nonsense. After the park's demise, some of its rides ended up at Excelsior Amusement Park on Lake Minnetonka.[4] The aerial swing, however, was purchased by Marion Savage for use at Antlers Park in Lakeville.[5]

One of the park’s most popular features was the "Infant Incubator Institute", whose owner, Dr. Martin A. Couney, had similar exhibits at amusement parks and expositions throughout the country and in Europe. The hospital, the only remaining structure from Wonderland, is now an apartment building at the intersection of 31st Avenue and 31st Street.[4]

Lawsuit

In 1905 Elim Presbyterian Church sued Wonderland in an effort to close the park down. Elim, on the northwest corner of 32nd Avenue and Lake Street, was opposite Wonderland’s main entrance. It argued that the park's crowds and noise interfered with worship services. The case was settled out of court, and the owners of Wonderland had the church moved to land they had purchased at 33rd Street and 30th Avenue. The congregation, later known as Vanderburgh Presbyterian Church, continued at that location for decades, and a house of worship is found there still.[2]

See also

References

  1. Wonderland Amusement Park mnopedia.org. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  2. 1 2 The neighborhood by the falls: a look back at life in Longfellow by Eric Hart, (Minneapolis: Longfellow Community Council, 2009), pp. 69–72.
  3. Lost Minnesota by Jack El-Hai, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000), pp. 62-63.
  4. 1 2 Karal Ann Marling, "Thrills and nostalgia: the amusement parks of Hennepin County" Hennepin History (Fall 1990). Vol. 49, No. 4, pp. 13–22.
  5. Picturing the past: events that shaped Dakota County in the twentieth century by David M. Schreier, (South St. Paul: Dakota County Historical Society, 2003).
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