Timeline: Difference between revisions

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* The park's first [[Roller Skating Rink (Building)|Roller Skating Rink]] was added near the southeast entrance with an approach from High Street.
* The park's first [[Roller Skating Rink (Building)|Roller Skating Rink]] was added near the southeast entrance with an approach from High Street.
* The Forest Toboggan is purchased from the Columbus Zoological Company and erected along High Street and to the north. It is changed to the [[Scenic Coaster]].<ref name="opening1906" />
* The Forest Toboggan is purchased from the Columbus Zoological Company and erected along High Street and to the north. It is changed to the [[Scenic Coaster]].<ref name="opening1906" />
* [[Fantasma]] was added to the park.
* Several attractions are added including [[Fantasma]], [[Creation or The Great Hereafter]], [[Photographic Gallery (2)|Photographic Gallery]], [[Theatorium]] and [[Tours of the World]].
* [[Temple of Mirth]] was added to a new [[Midway]] north of the planned Dancing Pavilion.
* [[Egyptian Mystery]] and [[The Third Degree]] are added to the [[Colonnade]]. The latter for only a year.
* [[Egyptian Mystery]] and [[The Third Degree]] are added to the [[Colonnade]]. The latter for only a year.
* J. W. Dusenbury closes Minerva Park to focus on Olentangy Park.<ref>"Plea for Minerva Park." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' September 29, 1906. Page 4.</ref>
* J. W. Dusenbury closes Minerva Park to focus on Olentangy Park.<ref>"Plea for Minerva Park." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' September 29, 1906. Page 4.</ref>

Revision as of 18:23, 3 January 2025

This page is under construction. Please remove this notice when complete.

Timeine

Below is a timeline of major events at Olentangy Park:

1890-1899

1896

1897

  • Kinetoscope views began to be shown to audiences every evening[4]

1898

  • After flooding destroyed the original alleys, four new alleys are built in the boathouse.[5][6]

1899

  • The Olentangy Park Company was incorporated.
  • The Columbus Street Railway Company transferred its lease to Joseph W. Dusenbury and Eli West,[7][8][9] but is often seen as being purchased by Joseph W. and Will J. Dusenbury or "The Dusenbury Brothers."[10] The Dusenbury Brothers also owned nearby Minerva Park and the Southern, Grand, and other theaters in Columbus.[1]
  • The Olentangy Park Casino and Theater was built just north of the ravine.[11][12][13][14][15]
  • Constables attempted to shut down the Sunday performance in the theater on June 18, 1899, resulting in a riot.[16][17]
  • The park's first funhouse, the Crystal Maze is built.[12][13]
  • A wing in the first Dancing Pavilion is closed and a bowling alley is installed.[11]

1900-1909

1900

1901

  • The Columbus Street Railway Company builds a new steel trestle bridge to replace the wooden one that went from High Street to Olentangy Park, expanding it to two tracks.[23][24][25][26]
  • A new dining hall and restaurant are added.[27]
  • J. W. Dusenbury secretly signs a 99-year lease on the park's property, renewal forever, beginning in March 1901 from Henry T. Chittenden and his ex-wife Henrietta B. Burgher, discovered through a land dispute. The Columbus Railway Company waives its lease on the property. This adds 27 acres to the park.[28][29]

1902

1903

  • The Dusenburys remove the fences in the Hays-Mackey dispute and saw the old dining hall in half as well as part of the Dancing Pavilion. A row of posts leading from High Street to the park grounds are removed, and the holes are filled in.[35]
  • The Columbus Railway Company leases five acres south of the park, extending it as far south as Dodridge Street, affording new walks and picnic grounds.[36] As part of the remodeling of all the buildings, calcium light effects are added to the theater and 1,000 additional lights are installed to the park.[37]
  • The Ball Grounds are improved, and the Modern Woodmen baseball team changes its name to the Olentangy Athletic Club.[38]
  • The Cave of the Winds, House of Trouble, Laughing Gallery, and Ferris Wheel are built. The Cave of the Winds and House of Trouble are open for just one year.
  • The Dusenburys open the Zoological Garden. The collection consists of buffalo, dromedaries, elk, deer, lions, leopards, bear, wild hogs, wild cats, foxes, fowls, and more.[39]
  • Naturalist Oliver Davie moves an extensive collection of mounted birds and animals from Minerva Park to Olentangy Park's new Museum of Ornithology.[40] An aquarium is built in the center of the building - the first of its kind in Columbus.[41]
  • The Crystal Maze closes after four years in operation.

1904

1905

1906

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Barret, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1, April 1984. Pages 5-9.
  2. "The Villa Renamed at Last." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 2, 1896. Page 7.
  3. "Olentangy Park Opened." Columbus Evening Dispatch, June 13, 1896. Page 5.
  4. Advertisement, Columbus Evening Dispatch, July 31, 1897. Page 6.
  5. "Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 27, 1898. Page 11.
  6. "Olentangy Park: The Band Concerts." Columbus Evening Dispatch, June 9, 1989. Page 11.
  7. "Conspiracy Charged By J. W. Dusenbury and His Friends." Columbus Evening Dispatch, August 1, 1899. Page 6.
  8. "Simply 'Referred' Was That Long-Looked-For Report." Columbus Evening Dispatch, August 8, 1899. Page 5.
  9. "Olentangy Park Started as Beer Garden in '90's." The Columbus Dispatch, August 30, 1931. Page 18-G.
  10. Lentz, Ed. 2021. "Columbus' amusement parks once were entertainment hot spots." The Columbus Dispatch, October 4, 2021. Accessed on July 22, 2022. https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2021/10/04/columbus-amusement-parks-once-were-entertainment-hot-spots/5886060001/
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Location is Changed." Columbus Evening Dispatch, March 27, 1899. Page 7.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio. Sanborn Map Company, Vol. 1, 1901. Map. https://www.loc.gov/item/sanborn06656_003/.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio. Sanborn Map Company, Vol. 1, 1901, Sheet 63. Map. https://sanborn-ohioweblibrary-org.oh0057.oplin.org/viewer/?id=13464
  14. 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/.
  15. General Map, The Olentangy Amusement Co., Columbus, Ohio, 1924.
  16. "Torrid Was Olentangy Heat." Columbus Evening Dispatch, June 19, 1899. Page 5.
  17. "That Sunday Riot." Columbus Evening Dispatch, June 19, 1899. Page 4.
  18. "Olentangy Park Started as Beer Garden in '90's." The Columbus Dispatch, August 30, 1931. Page 18-G.
  19. "Bathing at Olentangy Park." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, June 17, 1906. Page 2.
  20. "Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 20, 1900. Page 18.
  21. "Olentangy Park." The Democrat-Sentinel (Logan, OH), June 14, 1906. Page 2. Accessed through Newspapers.com Clip 1 | Clip 2
  22. "Olentangy Features." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 18, 1900. Page 7.
  23. "Steel Trestle." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 28, 1901. Page 7.
  24. "Bond was Filed." Columbus Evening Dispatch, June 13, 1901. Page 12.
  25. "The New Loop." Columbus Evening Dispatch, July 10, 1901. Page 7.
  26. "Real Estate Transfers." Columbus Evening Dispatch, July 10, 1901. Page 10.
  27. "Olentangy Park: Opening of the Season." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 19, 1901. Page 12.
  28. "H.T. Chittenden Sued." Friday Columbus Dispatch, June 13, 1902. Page 7.
  29. "Mrs. Burgher's Note." Wednesday Columbus Dispatch, July 23, 1902. Page 7.
  30. "Short Items." Columbus Evening Dispatch. 13 May 1901. Pg. 7.
  31. "Olentangy Then and Now." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, May 3, 1914. Page 46.
  32. "Olentangy Park—Tassin's New Comedy." Friday Columbus Dispatch, August 1, 1902. Page 7.
  33. "Geisha Girls are to be Attraction." Columbus Evening Dispatch, January 2, 1905. Page 5.
  34. Campbell, Alex. 2018. "Olentangy Park Chronology." Clintonville History, July 18, 2018. https://clintonvillehistory.com/wp-content/images/web-images-2018-07-18-alex-campbell/olentangy%20park%20chronology2.pdf
  35. "Roadways Cleared Up." Monday Columbus Dispatch. 2 November 1903. Pg. 7.
  36. "Olentangy Park." Wednesday Columbus Dispatch, April 1, 1903. Page 9.
  37. "Beautiful Olentangy." Monday Columbus Dispatch, May 18, 1903. Page 12.
  38. "Amature Notes." Friday Columbus Dispatch, June 12, 1903. Page 11.
  39. "Olentangy 'Zoo.'" The Sunday Columbus Dispatch, January 24, 1903. Page 6.
  40. "Olentangy Park." The Sunday Columbus Dispatch. May 3, 1903. Pages 8-9.
  41. "Birds and Fish." Saturday Columbus Dispatch, February 28, 1903. Page 11.
  42. "Olentangy Leases Filed." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. 12 June 1904. Pg. 7.
  43. 43.0 43.1 43.2 43.3 43.4 "Grand Opening Olentangy Park, Theater and Zoo." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, April 24, 1904. Page 4.
  44. 44.0 44.1 44.2 "Olentangy Park, a Coney Island Rival" The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, May 1, 1904. Page 4.
  45. 45.0 45.1 "New Greenhouse, Baby Elk, Enlarged Zoo and Landscape Gardening." Columbus Evening Dispatch, September 13, 1904. Page 7.
  46. Advertisement, The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, April 24, 1904. Page 4.
  47. The Billboard, 16 (17): 8. April 23, 1904.
  48. "Real Opening Day at Olentangy Park Today." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, May 22, 1904. Page 4.
  49. "Out for Salvage." Columbus Evening Dispatch, July 8, 1904. Page 3.
  50. 50.0 50.1 50.2 "Opening of Olentangy." Columbus Evening Dispatch, April 16, 1905. Page 6.
  51. "Resorts are Planning Many Improvements." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, February 11, 1906. Page 7.
  52. 52.0 52.1 52.2 "Olentangy Park Opens on April 29." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch, April 15, 1906. Page 7.
  53. "Auspicious Day for Park Opening." Columbus Evening Dispatch, April 30, 1906. Page 6.
  54. "Plea for Minerva Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch, September 29, 1906. Page 4.
  55. "First Wireless Message in Columbus." Columbus Evening Dispatch, May 17, 1906. Page 1.
  56. "First Wireless Message in Columbus." The Deaf-Mutes' Journal, May 24, 1906. Page 2. Accessed through the Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/TheDeaf-mutesJournalmay.241906/page/n1/mode/2up