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{{Infobox attraction|name=The Destruction of Johnstown|othernames=Johnstown Flood|section=Colonnade|opened=1910|built=1910|fires=July 1911|type=Cyclorama|frame=Wood}}
{{Infobox attraction|name=The Destruction of Johnstown|othernames=Johnstown Flood|section=Colonnade|opened=1910|built=1910|fires=July 1911|type=Cyclorama|frame=Wood}}
'''The Destruction of Johnstown''', mostly known as '''The Johnstown Flood''', was a [[cyclorama]] attraction built and opened in 1910 at Olentangy Park and burned down the following summer. Sharing space with [[Dear Old Coney Island]], it was located in a wood-frame building with burlap lining<ref name=":0">"Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 17 July 1911. Pg. 1. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref> near the [[Dancing Pavilion]] and Ye Olde Mill. It was considered part of the [[Colonnade]]<ref>"Olentangy Park Open for the New Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 18 April 1910. Pg. 6. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref>.
'''The Destruction of Johnstown''', mostly known as '''The Johnstown Flood''', was a [[cyclorama]] attraction built and opened in 1910 at Olentangy Park and burned down the following summer. Sharing space with [[Dear Old Coney Island]], it was located in a wood-frame building with burlap lining<ref name=":0">"Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 17 July 1911. Pg. 1. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref> near the [[Dancing Pavilion]] and Ye Olde Mill. It was considered part of the [[Colonnade]]<ref>"Olentangy Park Open for the New Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 18 April 1910. Pg. 6. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref>.
{{Summary|summarytext='''The Destruction of Johnstown''', mostly known as '''The Johnstown Flood''', was a [[cyclorama]] attraction built and opened in 1910 at Olentangy Park and burned down the following summer. Sharing space with [[Dear Old Coney Island]], it was located in a wood-frame building with burlap lining<ref name=":0">"Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 17 July 1911. Pg. 1. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref> near the [[Dancing Pavilion]] and Ye Olde Mill. It was considered part of the [[Colonnade]]<ref>"Olentangy Park Open for the New Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 18 April 1910. Pg. 6. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.</ref>.}}


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 04:45, 14 December 2021

The Destruction of Johnstown
Other Name(s) Johnstown Flood
Type Cyclorama
Park Section Colonnade
Built 1910
Opened 1910
Fires July 1911
Frame Wood

The Destruction of Johnstown, mostly known as The Johnstown Flood, was a cyclorama attraction built and opened in 1910 at Olentangy Park and burned down the following summer. Sharing space with Dear Old Coney Island, it was located in a wood-frame building with burlap lining[1] near the Dancing Pavilion and Ye Olde Mill. It was considered part of the Colonnade[2].

The Destruction of Johnstown, mostly known as The Johnstown Flood, was a cyclorama attraction built and opened in 1910 at Olentangy Park and burned down the following summer. Sharing space with Dear Old Coney Island, it was located in a wood-frame building with burlap lining[1] near the Dancing Pavilion and Ye Olde Mill. It was considered part of the Colonnade[3].

Description

Johnstown Flood was a cyclorama found in many parks depicting the Great Flood of 1889 that devastated Johnstown, Pennsylvania, when the South Fork Dam failed. The attraction had layered, moving canvases showing painted scenes from before, during, and after the disaster while pyrotechnics, electric lighting effects, water/steam effects, and moving 3-dimensional models to create an immersive storytelling experience.

Earlier versions were exhibited at the Pan-American Exposition in 1901 in New York's Coney Island from 1902-1906 and was called "the finest scenic electric production." At the Pan-American Exposition, the building that housed it was 100 ft. (30.5 m) wide by 140 ft. (42.7 m) long[4][5].

One version of Johnstown Flood was exhibited at the 1909 Stockholm Exhibition and had a 82-foot-wide stage and was called "our time's greatest electromechanical spectacle" and "left an indelible, fairy tale-like impression." A narrator gave an "over-the-top" descriptions and a woman who was connected to the disaster claimed the facts were inaccurate. The attraction was portable and flexible enough to be altered to show other disasters. However, the effects were expensive to produce and it took 13 employees to run[6].

Fires

In July 1911, a fire that began in the Old Mill ride spread to other attractions, destroying a total of five buildings. Manager J.W. Dusenbury said the buildings were uninsured[1].

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 17 July 1911. Pg. 1. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.
  2. "Olentangy Park Open for the New Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 18 April 1910. Pg. 6. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.
  3. "Olentangy Park Open for the New Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 18 April 1910. Pg. 6. Retrieved from the Columbus Dispatch Digital Archives.
  4. The Johnstown Flood Show (1902-1905) and The Deluge (1906-1908)
  5. The Johnstown Flood
  6. Johansson, Shelley. "First Person/The Swedish Johnstown flood." Post-Gazette.com. 30 July 2011. https://old.post-gazette.com/pg/11211/1163861-109-0.stm