The Third Degree: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
Updated SEO |
||
| Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
{{#seo:|description=A funhouse attraction called The Third Degree opened at Olentangy Park in 1906.}} | {{#seo:|description=A funhouse attraction called The Third Degree opened at Olentangy Park in 1906.}} | ||
{{#seo:|keywords=Third Degree, Olentangy Park, Olentangy Amusement Park, | {{#seo:|keywords=Third Degree, Funhouse, Olentangy Park, Olentangy Amusement Park, Columbus, Clintonville}} | ||
Latest revision as of 21:53, 4 December 2025
| Type | Funhouse |
|---|---|
| Park Section | Unknown |
| Built | 1906 |
| Opened | 1906 |
| Closed | 1906 |
A funhouse attraction called The Third Degree opened at Olentangy Park in 1906.[1]
There was a funhouse franchise called "The Third Degree"[2] so changes in management could have led to changes in the name. Other parks, such as Wonderland in Revere Beach, Massachusetts, had a similar attraction that also went by "The House of Mirth," "The House of Follies," "The Foolish House," and "The House that Jack Built." The front of the building in other parks would have a large depiction of a "monstrous idiot figure," and visitors would enter through the figure's legs.[2]
The House That Jack Built at Olentangy Park was built two years prior in the Colonnade. This could have been its successor. However, the "Third Degree" was rarely mentioned, even during the 1906 season.
According to historian Stephen R. Wilk, most Third Degree funhouses were operated by the Keystone Amusement Construction Company of Pittsburgh.[3]
References
- ↑ "Olentangy Park Opens on April 29." Columbus Evening Dispatch. April 15, 1906. Page 7.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lost Wonderland. Accessed on July 22, 2022.
- ↑ Wilk, Stephen R. Lost Wonderland: The Brief and Brilliant Life of Boston's Million Dollar Amusement Park. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2020. Page 76.