Laughing Gallery: Difference between revisions

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A [[Laughing Gallery]] attraction was added in [[1903 Season|1903]] at Olentangy Park,<ref>"Olentangy Park: Closing Day." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' September 20, 1903. Page 33.</ref> just south of the [[Mystic Castle]].<ref>"Olentangy Park." ''Sunday Columbus Dispatch,'' May 2, 1903. Page 8-9.</ref><ref>"Parks: Pleasure Resorts and Summer Gardens." ''Billboard,'' May 23, 1903. Vol. 15. Issue 21. Page 11.</ref><ref>''Clay Record.'' United States: Clay Record Publishing Company, 1903. Accessed through Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Clay_Record/c6pPAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0</ref> It was a funhouse<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> and most likely built by J. M. Naughton, who had a Columbus-based amusement construction company.<ref name="billboard">Advertisement. 1915. ''The Billboard,'' May 13, 1915. Vol. 17. Issue 19. Page 20. Accessed through the Internet Archive.</ref> It was at the park until 1906 when the [[Dancing Pavilion (2)|second Dancing Pavilion]] was built on the site.<ref>"Olentangy Park." ''The Democrat-Sentinel (Logan, OH),'' June 14, 1906. Page 2. Accessed through Newspapers.com [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-democrat-sentinel-olentangy-park-pa/1634143/ Clip 1] | [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-democrat-sentinel-olentangy-park-pa/1634148/ Clip 2]</ref>
A [[Laughing Gallery]] attraction was added in [[1903 Season|1903]] at Olentangy Park,<ref>"Olentangy Park: Closing Day." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' September 20, 1903. Page 33.</ref> just south of the [[Mystic Castle]].<ref>"Olentangy Park." ''Sunday Columbus Dispatch,'' May 2, 1903. Page 8-9.</ref><ref>"Parks: Pleasure Resorts and Summer Gardens." ''Billboard,'' May 23, 1903. Vol. 15. Issue 21. Page 11.</ref><ref>''Clay Record.'' United States: Clay Record Publishing Company, 1903. Accessed through Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Clay_Record/c6pPAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0</ref> It was a funhouse<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> and most likely built by J. M. Naughton, who had a Columbus-based amusement construction company.<ref name="billboard">Advertisement. 1915. ''The Billboard,'' May 13, 1915. Vol. 17. Issue 19. Page 20. Accessed through the Internet Archive.</ref> It was at the park until 1906<ref>"The Opening of Olentangy Park." ''The Marion Star (Marion, Ohio),'' April 28, 1906. Page 10. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-marion-star-the-opening-of-olentangy/161648170/</ref> when the [[Dancing Pavilion (2)|second Dancing Pavilion]] was built on the site.<ref>"Olentangy Park." ''The Democrat-Sentinel (Logan, OH),'' June 14, 1906. Page 2. Accessed through Newspapers.com [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-democrat-sentinel-olentangy-park-pa/1634143/ Clip 1] | [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-democrat-sentinel-olentangy-park-pa/1634148/ Clip 2]</ref>


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 16:47, 27 December 2024

Laughing Gallery
Type Funhouse
Park Section Midway
Center
Built 1903
Opened 1903
Closed 1906
Manufacturer J. M. Naughton
Number of Stories 1

A Laughing Gallery attraction was added in 1903 at Olentangy Park,[1] just south of the Mystic Castle.[2][3][4] It was a funhouse[5] and most likely built by J. M. Naughton, who had a Columbus-based amusement construction company.[6] It was at the park until 1906[7] when the second Dancing Pavilion was built on the site.[8]

Description

A similar attraction at Kennywood Park near Pittsburgh was described as having "'funhouse' style mirrors" and that "'you would get all the laughs coming to you when you entered the Laughing Gallery.'" The one at Olentangy Park and Kennywood Park appear to be some of the earliest versions of this attraction and came directly from the Paris Exposition. The mirrors were made of glass and later models replaced them with polished composite metal to lower cost and allow for mobility.[6] The one in Kennywood was installed by Fred Ingersoll's Amusement Construction Company and featured 4-by-7-foot (1.22 by 2.13 meters) distortion mirrors that were hand-made in Germany.[9]

References

  1. "Olentangy Park: Closing Day." Columbus Evening Dispatch, September 20, 1903. Page 33.
  2. "Olentangy Park." Sunday Columbus Dispatch, May 2, 1903. Page 8-9.
  3. "Parks: Pleasure Resorts and Summer Gardens." Billboard, May 23, 1903. Vol. 15. Issue 21. Page 11.
  4. Clay Record. United States: Clay Record Publishing Company, 1903. Accessed through Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Clay_Record/c6pPAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0
  5. Barrett, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1, April 1984. Page 11.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Advertisement. 1915. The Billboard, May 13, 1915. Vol. 17. Issue 19. Page 20. Accessed through the Internet Archive.
  7. "The Opening of Olentangy Park." The Marion Star (Marion, Ohio), April 28, 1906. Page 10. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-marion-star-the-opening-of-olentangy/161648170/
  8. "Olentangy Park." The Democrat-Sentinel (Logan, OH), June 14, 1906. Page 2. Accessed through Newspapers.com Clip 1 | Clip 2
  9. Davis, Rick. 2011. "The Dark Side of Kennywood." Dark Attraction & Funhouse Enthusiasts. Published in 2011. Accessed 30 July 2022. https://www.dafe.org/articles/darkrides/darkSideOfKennywood.html