Joy Mill: Difference between revisions

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| numstories  = 2
| numstories  = 2
| section      = Midway
| section      = Midway
| opened      = Early 1920s
| opened      = 1922
| built        = 1913
| built        = 1913
| image        = CannonBallExpress Photo OhioMemory cropped JoyMill.jpg
| image        = CannonBallExpress Photo OhioMemory cropped JoyMill.jpg
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The [[Joy Mill]] was a funhouse attraction originally built as [[The Fun House]] at Olentangy Park and enlarged and renamed in the early 1920s.<ref>"New Amusement Devices." ''The Columbus Dispatch,'' April 30, 1922. Page 8.</ref><ref name="historian">Barrett, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." ''Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1,'' April 1984. Page 11.</ref> It was sometimes referred to as "The Fun House and Joy Mill".<ref>"State Fair Week Amusements." ''The Union County Journal (Marysville, Ohio),'' August 26, 1921. Page 7. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-union-county-journal-state-fair-week/161669507/</ref> It was built across from Kelso Road, on the location of the first [[Ye Olde Mill (1)|Ye Olde Mill]] ride<ref>"Joy Mill to Be Free Ride for Dispatch Picnickers." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' July 13, 1929. Page 7.</ref><ref>''General Map, The Olentangy Amusement Co., Columbus, Ohio,'' 1924.</ref><ref name="sanborn1922">''Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio.'' Sanborn Map Company, - 1922 Vol. 3, 1922, 1922. Map. https://www.loc.gov/item/sanborn06656_008/.</ref> that burned down in 1911.
The [[Joy Mill]] was a funhouse attraction originally built as [[The Fun House]] at Olentangy Park and enlarged and renamed in 1922.<ref>"New Amusement Devices." ''The Columbus Dispatch.'' April 30, 1922. Page 8.</ref><ref name="historian">Barrett, Richard E. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." ''Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1.'' April 1984. Page 11.</ref> It was sometimes referred to as "The Fun House and Joy Mill".<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-union-county-journal-state-fair-week/161669507/ "State Fair Week Amusements."] ''The Union County Journal (Marysville, Ohio).'' Aug. 26, 1921. Page 7. Accessed through Newspapers.com.</ref> It was built across from Kelso Road, on the location of the first [[Ye Olde Mill (1)|Ye Olde Mill]] ride<ref>"Joy Mill to Be Free Ride for Dispatch Picnickers." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' July 13, 1929. Page 7.</ref><ref>''General Map, The Olentangy Amusement Co., Columbus, Ohio.'' 1924.</ref><ref name="sanborn1922">''[https://www.loc.gov/item/sanborn06656_008/ Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio.]'' Sanborn Map Company, - 1922 Vol. 3, 1922, 1922. Map.</ref> that burned down in [[Midway Fire of 1911|1911]].


New mirrors were added in 1933.<ref>{{Cite news |lastname = Charrington|firstname = H. E.|articletitle = Olentangy Still Mecca|pub = The Columbus Dispatch|date = June 6, 1933|page = 12 }}</ref>
New mirrors were added in 1933.<ref>{{Cite news |lastname = Charrington|firstname = H. E.|articletitle = Olentangy Still Mecca|pub = The Columbus Dispatch|date = June 6, 1933|page = 12 }}</ref>


The attraction was one of the many sold off by the Cleveland Wrecking Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1938 after the park closed the year prior.<ref>Advertisement. 1938. ''The Billboard,'' May 14, 1938. Page 45. Accessed through the Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/sim_billboard_1938-05-14_50_20/page/44</ref><ref name="map">Franklin Survey Co. Map. 1937. ''City of Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio,'' Vol. 1. Accessed through Ebay.com https://www.ebay.com/itm/235251834706</ref>
The attraction was one of the many sold off by the Cleveland Wrecking Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1938.<ref>Advertisement. ''[https://archive.org/details/sim_billboard_1938-05-14_50_20/page/44 The Billboard.]'' May 14, 1938. Page 45. Accessed through the Internet Archive.</ref><ref name="map">''[https://www.ebay.com/itm/235251834706 City of Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio.]'' Franklin Survey Co. Map. 1937. Vol. 1. Accessed through Ebay.com.</ref>


== Gallery==
== Gallery==
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:CannonBallExpress Photo OhioMemory.jpg|alt=The Cannon Ball Express miniature railway and the Midway with the second Ye Old Mill, Mysterious Sensation, Rifle Range, and the Joy Mill. (c. 1929-1930s)|The Cannon Ball Express miniature railway and the [[Midway]] with the second [[Ye Olde Mill (2)|Ye Old Mill]], [[Mysterious Sensation]], [[Rifle Range]], and the Joy Mill. (c. 1929-1930s)
File:CannonBallExpress Photo OhioMemory.jpg|alt=The Cannon Ball Express miniature railway and the Midway with the second Ye Old Mill, Mysterious Sensation, Rifle Range, and the Joy Mill. (c. 1929-1930s)|The Cannon Ball Express miniature railway and the Midway with the second [[Ye Olde Mill (2)|Ye Old Mill]], [[Mysterious Sensation]], [[Rifle Range]], and the Joy Mill. (c. 1929-1930s)
File:Midway Photo OhioMemory.jpg|alt=The Midway at Olentangy Park with the second Ye Olde Mill, Mysterious Sensation, Joy Mill, and second Dancing Pavilion.|The Midway at Olentangy Park with the second [[Ye Olde Mill (2)|Ye Olde Mill]], [[Mysterious Sensation]], Joy Mill, and second [[Dancing Pavilion (2)|Dancing Pavilion]].   
File:Midway Photo OhioMemory.jpg|alt=The Midway at Olentangy Park with the second Ye Olde Mill, Mysterious Sensation, Joy Mill, and second Dancing Pavilion.|The Midway at Olentangy Park with the second [[Ye Olde Mill (2)|Ye Olde Mill]], [[Mysterious Sensation]], Joy Mill, and second [[Dancing Pavilion (2)|Dancing Pavilion]].   
</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 04:42, 4 October 2025

Joy Mill
Type Funhouse
Park Section Midway
Built 1913
Opened 1922
Closed 1937 (park closure)
Frame Wood
Number of Stories 2
Replaced Fun House

The Joy Mill was a funhouse attraction originally built as The Fun House at Olentangy Park and enlarged and renamed in 1922.[1][2] It was sometimes referred to as "The Fun House and Joy Mill".[3] It was built across from Kelso Road, on the location of the first Ye Olde Mill ride[4][5][6] that burned down in 1911.

New mirrors were added in 1933.[7]

The attraction was one of the many sold off by the Cleveland Wrecking Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1938.[8][9]

See Also

References

  1. "New Amusement Devices." The Columbus Dispatch. April 30, 1922. Page 8.
  2. Barrett, Richard E. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1. April 1984. Page 11.
  3. "State Fair Week Amusements." The Union County Journal (Marysville, Ohio). Aug. 26, 1921. Page 7. Accessed through Newspapers.com.
  4. "Joy Mill to Be Free Ride for Dispatch Picnickers." Columbus Evening Dispatch. July 13, 1929. Page 7.
  5. General Map, The Olentangy Amusement Co., Columbus, Ohio. 1924.
  6. Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio. Sanborn Map Company, - 1922 Vol. 3, 1922, 1922. Map.
  7. Charrington, H. E.. "Olentangy Still Mecca." The Columbus Dispatch. June 6, 1933. Page 12.
  8. Advertisement. The Billboard. May 14, 1938. Page 45. Accessed through the Internet Archive.
  9. City of Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio. Franklin Survey Co. Map. 1937. Vol. 1. Accessed through Ebay.com.