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The Amusement Park at Sloan's Lake - The Lost History of Denver's Manhattan Beach (Paperback)
Loot Price: R448
Discovery Miles 4 480
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The Amusement Park at Sloan's Lake - The Lost History of Denver's Manhattan Beach (Paperback)
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Loot Price R448
Discovery Miles 4 480
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R458
Discovery Miles: 4 580
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Sloan’s Lake had a long history of entertaining Denver residents
with boating, fishing, swimming, and a steamboat canal built in the
1870s. In 1890, Adam Graff and his partners opened a new park on
the shore of Sloan’s Lake that would eventually become Manhattan
Beach. Originally created as a summer pleasure resort with a highly
respected summer theater, boating, fishing, and music, the park
quickly expanded to include typical amusement attractions,
including Denver’s first roller coaster and merry-go-round. When
the concept of the amusement park was created in 1895 with the
opening of Sea Lion Park on Coney Island in New York, Manhattan
Beach was already a step ahead of rivals Elitch Gardens and
Arlington Park. Operating from 1890 to 1914, Manhattan Beach
Amusement Park was the first true amusement park in Denver and was
enjoyed by residents and visitors for nearly twenty-five years as
Denver tried to shake off its image as a dusty cow town from gold
mining days and fought to be seen as a sophisticated and
well-developed city. Manhattan Beach played an important role in
amusement park history in the United States, but its full story has
never before been told. Manhattan Beach’s story is an important
addition to both Denver and Colorado’s history as it reflects the
city’s growth during the late 1800s and early 1900s. The park has
also inspired many legends, the most famous of which concerns Roger
the Elephant, who arrived at Manhattan Beach in 1891, and his
supposed death and burial in a swamp near the park. Much of what
has been told about Manhattan Beach in the years since it closed is
more myth than fact, as this book demonstrates. After the amusement
park closed in 1914, the city of Denver purchased the land and
turned it into Sloan’s Lake Park, which continues to be a
gathering place for Denverites.
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