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Steeplechase Park

Steeplechase Park was an amusement park that operated in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City, United States, from 1897 to 1964. Steeplechase Park was created by the entrepreneur George C. Tilyou as the first of the three large amusement parks built on Coney Island, the other two being Luna Park (1903) and Dreamland (1904). Of the three, Steeplechase was the longest-lasting, running for 67 years.

Steeplechase Park
Entrance to Steeplechase Park
LocationBrooklyn, New York, United States
Coordinates40°34′27″N 73°58′50″W / 40.57417°N 73.98056°W / 40.57417; -73.98056
StatusDefunct
Opened1897[1]
Closed1964
OwnerGeorge C. Tilyou
Operated byTilyou family
General manager
  • George C. Tilyou (1897–1914)
  • Thomas F. McGowan (1914–1927)
  • James J. Onorato (1927–1959)
  • Marie Tilyou (1959–1964)
Area15 acres (6.1 ha)

The park covered 15 acres (6.1 ha) at its peak. Its first rides were standalone attractions scattered around Coney Island that Tilyou had purchased in the early 1890s. Steeplechase itself opened in 1897 to unite these formerly separate attractions, and quickly gained popularity as a family-friendly destination with exhibitionist and risque undertones. It was destroyed by fire in 1907, but was quickly rebuilt. Steeplechase remained profitable as the Tilyou family continually brought in new rides and new amusements, such as the Parachute Jump. However, by the 1960s Steeplechase Park was becoming unprofitable due to high crime, the growth of suburban getaways, and the area's general trend toward residential development.

After the park closed in 1964, developer Fred Trump purchased the land and planned to develop it for residential use, but this never occurred, and the site was used seasonally for amusement rides during the 1970s. A dispute ensued over the proposed use of the Steeplechase Park site in the 1980s and 1990s, as two developers disagreed over whether to rebuild the amusement park or build a sports complex on the site. A minor-league baseball stadium called Keyspan Park (now Maimonides Park) was built in 2001.

The Parachute Jump is the only remaining portion of the former amusement park. The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation maintains the land under Maimonides Park as part of a green space also called Steeplechase Park. Steeplechase Plaza, a portion of Luna Park (2010) that contains the B&B Carousell, was named in homage to the former Steeplechase Park.

History edit

Steeplechase was created by George C. Tilyou (1862–1914).[2] On his honeymoon in 1893, he and his wife visited the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where he saw the 250-foot-diameter (76 m) Ferris wheel and wanted to buy it. Since the wheel had already been sold, Tilyou built his own half-size version at Surf Avenue, on Coney Island, which soon became Coney Island's biggest attraction.[3][4][5] After noting that the nearby Sheepshead Bay, Gravesend and Brighton Beach horseracing tracks were very popular, Tilyou added other rides and attractions on the Coney Island peninsula. He came to own several rides, though none were part of a single park. In fact, until the opening of Paul Boyton's Sea Lion Park nearby in 1895, all of Coney Island's rides were separately operated.[6][7] As a result, Tilyou's concessions were originally overshadowed by the saloons on nearby Bowery Street.[5]

1897–1907: Creation and early years edit

 
The steeplechase ride

Steeplechase Park opened in 1897 after Tilyou bought and improved the Steeplechase Horses attraction.[7][8] Steeplechase Horses, manufactured by J.W. Cawdry, featured gravity-pulled mechanical horses racing along metal tracks.[6][9] The park covered 15 acres (6.1 ha), an area of which Tilyou owned two-thirds outright; the other third was leased from the Huber family. It was located at the western end of Bowery Street.[3][9][10] Steeplechase was approached by a grand stone archway on Surf Avenue to the north, the top of the archway decorated by four stone horses. The inclusion of a gateway, along with a new 25-cent admission charge, were intended to exclude the "seedier elements" and make the park a family destination. Drinking was prohibited, as was gambling and prostitution.[10][11][12]

The park included over 50 attractions on its midway alone.[13] Attractions included novelties such as the Human Niagara, a Venetian gondola-style ride, the Aerial Racing Slide, the Double-Dip Chutes, the Bicycle Railway, a "French Voyage" panorama, and a Wild West sideshow.[14][15] Tilyou also operated a small steam railroad, a saltwater pool, a ballroom, and the Scenic Railroad coaster by LaMarcus Thompson.[3] Completing the park were scale models of world landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower and Big Ben.[16] Steeplechase Pier, a pier jutting into the ocean, was built to the south of the park in 1904.[17] Tilyou adopted a "Funny Face" mascot depicting a smiling man with several dozen teeth, nicknamed "the Tilly", as the icon for his park. The mascot, which became a symbol of Coney Island, represented the area's wholesomeness and neoclassical architecture combined with its veneer of hidden sexuality.[14][10][18][19] Tilyou's personal motto, "Keep 'em laughing", was symbolized by rides with such unconventional names as Whirlpool, Soup Bowl, Human Roulette, Human Pool Table, and Earthquake Staircase.[5]

 
An admissions ticket for Steeplechase Park from 1905. George C. Tilyou's "Funny Face" logo became the iconic symbol of Coney Island.[10]

In 1901, Tilyou visited the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo, New York, to find additional rides for Steeplechase Park. He approached Frederic Thompson (no relation to LaMarcus) and Elmer "Skip" Dundy, the creators of the popular A Trip To The Moon ride, to ask if they would bring their ride to Steeplechase.[7][3][20] The ride, an indoor dark ride that simulated a space flight, had been popular in the exposition, and Thompson and Dundy signed an agreement to relocate it to Steeplechase for a year. However, a rainy 1902 season reduced the profits of amusement park operators at Coney Island that year and forced the closure of the adjacent Sea Lion Park. Thompson and Dundy spent $700,000 rebuilding Sea Lion and moved Trip to the Moon to the newly expanded park, now called Luna Park, in 1903.[3][21][22]

Following Luna Park's success, another amusement park on Coney Island, Dreamland, opened in 1904.[23] At Coney Island's peak in the middle of the 20th century's first decade, the three amusement parks competed with each other and with many independent amusements.[24][25] This was attributed partially to the variety of transit options available: by 1904, there were five railroads to Coney Island.[7] Both Luna Park and Dreamland had more expensive attractions than Steeplechase Park. Tilyou countered this by modifying and adding contraptions for his customers, most of which carried an exhibitionist and risque undertone but were nonetheless popular despite their vulgarity.[3][23][22][26] The entrance contained the Barrel of Love, a 30-by-10-foot (9.1 by 3.0 m) revolving drum that threw visitors onto each other. Other contraptions included the Human Roulette Wheel, Earthquake Stairway, Dew Drop, Whichway, and Wedding Ring. All of these rides tossed riders around, often on top of each other, as they were designed under the assumption that men and women wanted any excuses to grab onto each other.[23][26]

 
Map of Steeplechase Park as seen in 1906

The success of Steeplechase and other parks in Coney Island inspired Tilyou to create additional amusement parks in the New York City area and elsewhere.[27] In November 1904, Tilyou announced that he would sell Steeplechase Park to a syndicate of investors for $1.25 million, since he wanted to operate another amusement park in Rockaway, Queens.[28] However, the sale of Steeplechase was annulled in February 1905 after $50,000 had been paid, since "defective titles" prevented the syndicate from purchasing some of the land under the park.[29] From 1905 to 1907, Tilyou refined Steeplechase Park with attractions such as a miniature railroad, an orchestra stand, the Cave of the Winds, a Fads and Fantasy Building, the Limit Building, and a children's pony track. The Limit Building was short-lived, being replaced by the Monte Carlo Building in 1907.[3][26]

1907 fire and rebuilding edit

In the early morning of July 29, 1907, a fire started in the Cave of the Winds attraction. It spread quickly, destroying most of the wooden pavilions and hotels around Bowery Street; firefighters fought to save Tilyou's house at the corner of Steeplechase Park. The three-alarm fire was extinguished after two hours, but about 35 acres (14 ha) of Coney Island was destroyed. Steeplechase Park bore much of the damage, which was estimated at $1.5 million, but several hotels were also ruined.[30][31] Even though the fire destroyed nearly everything within Steeplechase Park, Tilyou reportedly remained calm throughout, even promising to host events that had been planned in the park before the fire.[22][32] The morning after the fire, Tilyou posted a sign in front of the park, which read:

To My Friends: I have troubles today that I had not yesterday. I had troubles yesterday which I have not today. On this site will be built a bigger, better, Steeplechase Park. Admission to the burning ruins — Ten cents.[15][33]

Tilyou stated that the park would be restored to a "grander than ever" condition, but in the meantime, he would erect temporary tent shows.[34] The remaining attractions opened one week after the fire.[15] Ultimately, the park was rebuilt with fireproof steel-and-concrete structures, as the municipality had passed a law restricting the construction of combustible wooden structures.[35][36] The park's reconstruction was funded by a $2 million stock measure issued by the Steeplechase Park Company, which Tilyou established in 1908.[37] Tilyou sold 100,000 shares in that company to the public and gave a season pass to everyone who bought a $5 stock certificate.[38] The park partially reopened in April 1908.[39][40] The New York Times described the construction as "scarcely finished" and that crowds "flocked" to the rebuilt attractions.[40]

 
A decorative indoor elephant in Steeplechase's vast Pavilion of Fun by Eugene Wemlinger, 1910. Brooklyn Museum.

The reconstruction was completed in 1909.[41] The rebuilt park's main attraction was the Pavilion of Fun, a steel-and-glass enclosure measuring 450 by 280 feet (137 by 85 m), with an area of 2.8 acres (11,000 m2). It contained several rides and tawdry, exhibitionist attractions reminiscent of the previous iteration of Steeplechase Park, such as the Human Wheel, Human Niagara, the Mixer, and the Grinder.[10][42][43] The Pavilion of Fun had opened during the 1908 season.[44] The Ferris wheel was salvaged from the original park and was placed outdoors. A new Steeplechase Horses attraction was built around the pavilion, designed so that riders had to exit through the Pavilion of Fun.[45][41][42] Steeplechase also included two new entrances, a 300-by-40-foot (91 by 12 m) plaza overlooking a sunken garden, the Palace of Pleasure, a ballroom, and various sideshows.[41][43] Other attractions included airships, Venetian gondolas, and an Automobile ride similar to that in the first Steeplechase Park.[45][43] There were eight roller coasters inside the rebuilt park as well.[45] As before the fire, admission was 25 cents. A "combo" admission ticket entitled the holder to one experience on each of the park's 25 attractions.[43]

1910s and 1920s edit

Tilyou continued to add attractions to Steeplechase in the late 1900s and early 1910s. He added the first of several carousels to the park in 1908, and the "World's Largest Swimming Pool" was completed the following year.[43][42] Tilyou opened a hall with an indoor swimming pool to the west of the pavilion in 1911, at which point he declared that he wanted to add one new ride per week.[46] Several attractions opened in 1912, including the El Dorado Carousel and other structures salvaged from Dreamland after it was destroyed in a 1911 fire.[42] Around this time, local residents and businesspeople were advocating for the construction of a public beach and boardwalk along the Atlantic Ocean.[47] The New York Supreme Court ruled in 1913 that the state government could take over a 633-by-126-foot (193 by 38 m) section of Steeplechase Park, along the Atlantic shoreline, to make way for the public beach.[48][49]

 
El Dorado Carousel, now located at the Toshimaen amusement park in Tokyo
 
Outdoor pool, seen in 1912

In 1914, Tilyou died, leaving the care of the park to his children; Thomas F. McGowan then became general manager of the park.[43][42][10] Steeplechase would remain within the Tilyou family until it closed a half-century later.[10] George's oldest son Edward, an 18-year-old at the time of his father's death, constructed a skating rink at Steeplechase in 1915.[43] A Racing Derby Carousel by master carousel builder Marcus Illions was added in 1920, and it featured 16 rows of four horses cycling up-and-down on small tracks within the carousel. Shortly afterward, Edward Tilyou also added "Babyland", a children's play area near the southeast corner of the park.[42][50] Other attractions built in the early 1920s included the Frolic spinning ride, bumper cars, the Witchway swing, and a Caterpillar flat ride.[43] By the early 1920s, the crowds at Steeplechase and other Coney Island parks had become more mellow and orderly, though the beachfront in general was described as rundown.[51] Steeplechase Park started hosting several beauty contests near its outdoor pool, providing more entertainment for park patrons. These included the "Modern Venus" Bathing Beauty Contest, first held in 1922, and Grandma's Beauty Contest, which started in 1932.[43][42][52]

This period also saw the destruction of some structures, such as the Upside-Down House burning down in 1911.[53] Additionally, Steeplechase lost its private beach during the early 1910s.[43][54] Following a 1912 lawsuit by New York State against Tilyou and other amusement owners for taking private ownership of Coney Island's beach,[55] a judge ruled in 1913 that the beach actually belonged to the state.[54] An appellate court affirmed this decision in 1916, with an exception made for part of Steeplechase Park, a plot of land granted by the state prior to the creation of the park itself.[56] All obstructions on the beachfront, including a concrete walk within Steeplechase, were demolished in accordance with the ruling.[57]

The Riegelmann Boardwalk was opened on the waterfront in 1922.[58] In conjunction with the boardwalk's opening, the city slightly relocated West 16th and West 19th Streets at Steeplechase Park's eastern and western borders, respectively, which resulted in a slight expansion to Steeplechase's area.[59] The boardwalk's opening resulted in increases to real estate valuations at nearby areas, such as Steeplechase Park,[60] though some lots were also taken from the park to make way for new streets leading to the boardwalk.[61] As a result, a former Brooklyn engineer alleged that the Tilyous lost money from the relocation of West 16th and West 19th Streets.[59] The boardwalk's completion and a subsequent widening of Surf Avenue in 1924 prompted Edward Tilyou to make additional improvements to Steeplechase Park.[43] The mid-1920s were described as the "golden age" of roller coasters on Coney Island: two gravity rides called the Zip and the Limit were constructed in Steeplechase Park, and immediately to the east, independent ride operator George Moran built the Thunderbolt roller coaster.[62] Also built were a water ride called the "Old Mill tunnel of love"[63][64] and a Noah's Ark-style attraction.[65] Thomas McGowan died unexpectedly in 1927 and was replaced by James J. Onorato. The following year, one of the pools was demolished and replaced with an attraction called Hey Day, while a gas-powered Custer Cars attraction was installed on the boardwalk.[43]

1930s: Great Depression through World War II edit

The Great Depression resulted in significantly decreased attendance at Steeplechase Park.[42][66] Before money ran out, a one-ring circus was constructed between the Limit coaster and an adjacent pool, while a children's wading pool was constructed. In addition, a carousel was constructed at West 16th Street in 1930, and the Whale and the Whip replaced Noah's Ark the following year.[43] People still came to see the beauty contests at Steeplechase Park.[42] In 1934, when finances slowly started to improve, a bobsled roller coaster model called Flying Turns was installed at Steeplechase.[67][68]

Several accidents and fires continued to occur at Steeplechase.[43] A fire in July 1932 caused $1.5 million in damage and injured six people,[69][70] and left at least a thousand people homeless.[71] However, Steeplechase Park and Luna Park were not as heavily damaged since the fire was mostly concentrated to the west.[70] There were other incidents as well: in 1933, fifty-seven people were hurt in a balcony collapse caused by overcrowding,[72][73] and three years later, a barge crashed into the Steeplechase Pier. In addition, patrons frequently received minor injuries such as friction burns, though some people were thrown or fell from rides, and one child died after falling off the Steeplechase Horses in 1935.[43][42] A conflagration in September 1939 caused $200,000 in damage and injured 18 people. The concessions on the boardwalk were destroyed, as was the entrance to the park from the boardwalk, and several attractions within the park itself.[74][75] The following year, a new brick concession structure was built on the site of the old concessions, and an Express Train ride was erected in front of the pavilion.[43]

 
The Parachute Jump, acquired by Steeplechase from the 1939 New York World's Fair, still stands

The 1939 New York World's Fair in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, several miles to the northeast of Coney Island, had created competition for Coney Island amusement parks, which saw sharply reduced attendance. Steeplechase's situation was exacerbated by the September 1939 fire, which had destroyed many of the larger attractions, including Flying Turns.[43] After the World's Fair closed in 1940, the Tilyous purchased the fair's Parachute Jump, a parachute tower ride, and moved it to the former site of Flying Turns. The ride, inspired by a training device for paratroopers, opened in 1941 and contained 12 parachutes descending from a 250-foot-tall (76 m) tower.[76][77][78] The Parachute Jump's installation was part of a reconstruction of an 800-foot (240 m) stretch of the Riegelmann Boardwalk.[79] Other rides were added at Steeplechase in 1941, including rocket cars, a Whip ride, and the Silver Streak. The draft during World War II resulted in a shortage of qualified staff, and Onorato temporarily closed the Pavilion of Fun in 1945 due to the staff shortage.[43][42][79] Only 70 people worked at Steeplechase that year, compared to 300 in a normal operating year; the park returned to normal staffing levels in 1946.[79]

1940s and 1950s: downfall edit

Despite the park's popularity with New Yorkers, many factors after the end of World War II would eventually lead to its decline, including frequent fires, low patronage, and white flight.[80] Steeplechase's closest competitor, Luna Park, was heavily damaged by a pair of fires in 1944.[81] Luna Park closed in 1946, leaving Steeplechase as the only major amusement park on Coney Island.[82] Moreover, after Edward Tilyou died in 1944,[83] control of the park was transferred to his siblings George Jr., Frank, Marie, and Eileen, who each owned a quarter share in the Steeplechase Corporation. The relationship between the siblings was fractious, and they often argued about Steeplechase's management.[43][42]

In 1945, the Tilyou siblings leased out the boardwalk carousel to their cousin James J. McCullough.[43] They rented out the pool in 1946; the pool's new operators instituted a season pass scheme that effectively locked out African Americans from using the pool, despite the fact that an increasing proportion of Steeplechase visitors was African-American.[42][84] Park officials also discontinued the use of a flat admission fee and began selling tickets at three prices.[85] The ballroom was also split in half to create a TV studio in 1947. The same year, the Tilyou siblings discontinued the combination ticket and started offering a pass where patrons could go on any 15 rides for one dollar. In practice, not many people bought the 15-ride pass, since various special-interest groups such as social, political, and religious organizations had designated days where they could visit Steeplechase Park for free.[43] Steeplechase also saw its 20-millionth visitor that year.[86] The Tilyous added extra rides for the 1948 season, including the Scrambler, the C-Cruise, and several children's rides.[43] Onorato added a "lost kids' department" at the park in 1951 for children who had become separated from their guardians.[87]

Steeplechase Park continued its downward trajectory with the demolition of several rides and structures and the neglect of others. The skating rink, now used only for the Tilyous' private functions, was demolished in December 1951. The following year, several structures on West 19th Street were demolished, as was the little-used Old Mill boat ride that ran under one of these structures; the site was filled by a parking lot in 1954. Other impediments included a 1953 flood and fire, which destroyed machinery; the death of the Tilyou siblings' mother in 1954, which caused further acrimony among the siblings; and the underpayment of employees, which was one of the main reasons Steeplechases' employees were mostly elderly citizens who could afford to take such a low wage. The park started becoming profitable again when Arthur Godfrey and His Friends started broadcasting from Steeplechase in 1955.[43][42] After Steeplechase Pier was destroyed by fire in 1957,[88][89] a larger replacement opened the next year.[90] George Tilyou Jr. died in 1958,[91] and his sister Marie took over as Steeplechase Corporation president the next year, demoting James Onorato to general manager. Marie, who had long wanted to change Steeplechase's image against the wishes of her brothers, began adding rides for the 1959 and 1960 seasons, such as a Tilt-a-Whirl, a Round Up ride, and a Paratrooper ride.[43]

Demise edit

New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses was a longtime critic of Coney Island, describing the beach as so crowded that bathers had less room than in a coffin.[92] As early as 1937, he had published a report about the possible redevelopment of Coney Island.[93] Moses, who was also a New York City housing commissioner, rezoned the area for high-rise housing in the late 1940s.[94] Subsequently, in 1953, Moses proposed that most of the peninsula be rezoned for various uses, claiming that it would be an "upgrade" over the various business and unrestricted zones that existed at the time. Steeplechase Park would be allowed to remain open, but much of the shorefront amusements and concessions would be replaced by residential developments.[95][96]

At the time, Coney Island was seeing fewer visitors year-over-year. Crime increases, insufficient parking facilities, bad weather, and the post-World War II automotive boom were cited as contributing factors in the decrease of visitors to Coney Island. The start of the 1964 New York World's Fair, also in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, was another factor.[97] Ironically, prior to the World's Fair, Steeplechase Park was seeing record high patronage; the highest single-day visitor count, over 18,000 customers, was recorded in 1961. Nevertheless, it also faced problems of its own: a severe assault of an employee in 1961 forced the closure of the Insanitorium, while Marie Tilyou was opposed to her nephew Frank II's proposal to bring rides from the Century 21 Exposition to the park. Further, Steeplechase had been leasing one-third of its land from the Huber family, which decided to sell that land in 1962.[43] More attractions were destroyed in a 1963 fire, which razed two blocks on Steeplechase's west side.[98] High crime was also rampant; for instance, a mass shooting nearby in 1962 resulted in three people being killed,[99] and visitors were generally afraid of being attacked by residents of nearby public housing projects.[42] By 1964, the area had seen its lowest number of patrons in a quarter-century.[97] The Tilyou family was paying $120,000 annually in taxes.[100]

By the early 1960s, the children of George C. Tilyou were themselves aging; his last surviving son, Frank, died in 1964.[101] The shares of Steeplechase Park were now held by four women—Marie, Eileen, and the respective widows of Frank and George Jr.—all of whom had differing visions for the park.[43] Steeplechase Park closed for the season on September 20, 1964, for what would be the last time.[102][103] Though no official closure announcement was made, rumors of a sale started circulating in February 1965.[104][105] Developer Fred Trump bought the property for $2.5 million[100] on July 1, 1965, and announced his intention to build luxury apartments on the old Steeplechase property.[106][107] Though the sale was opposed by the Coney Island Chamber of Commerce, it was consistent with the area's gradual conversion into a residential community.[108] At the time of its closure, Steeplechase Park was Coney Island's longest-lasting attraction; it had outlasted the original park's steeplechase attractions by more than a half-century.[20]

Later use of the site edit

Trump ownership and Kaufman operation edit

1960s edit

 
A 1973 photo of an abandoned "Giant Slide" that had been set up for a few years on the old Steeplechase site

Trump demolished Steeplechase Park's Pavilion of Fun during a highly publicized ceremony in September 1966.[103][109] At the demolition, he was said to have sold bricks to ceremony guests to smash the remaining glass windows on the Pavilion of Fun.[80][110][111] Trump supposedly destroyed the pavilion to circumvent a landmark law being proposed by the city following the demolition of the old Pennsylvania Station in 1963.[20][111] Mechanical horses from Steeplechase Park were sold to a park in Dania Beach, Florida,[20][112] while the El Dorado Carousel was first placed into storage in New Jersey and then sent to Japan.[113] On part of Steeplechase Park's site, Trump proposed building a 160-foot-high (49 m) enclosed dome with recreational facilities and a convention center, designed by Morris Lapidus.[114][115] Brooklyn borough president Abe Stark supported the proposal,[114] while the Coney Island Chamber of Commerce opposed the plans, saying the proposed dome was too small to accommodate recreational uses.[115] Trump wanted to build four 30-story apartment towers, with a total of 3,000 apartments, on the remainder of the site.[116]

The Coney Island Chamber of Commerce submitted plans to Stark for a 12.5-acre (5.1 ha) resort on Steeplechase Park's site in December 1965.[117] In October 1966, the city announced its plans to acquire the former park so that the land could be reserved for recreational use.[118] Although residents supported the city's action, Trump called the city's proposal "wasteful".[119] The New York City Planning Commission rezoned the Steeplechase site for recreational use around 1967.[116] The same year,[120] Trump started leasing the property to Norman Kaufman, who operated fairground amusements on a corner of the site, calling his amusement park "Steeplechase Park".[103][121] Kaufman and his partner Irving Vichinsky operated 53 rides, including three roller coasters.[122]

New York City parks commissioner August Heckscher II proposed in January 1968 that the New York state government build an "open-space" state park on the Steeplechase site,[123] and the New York City Board of Estimate voted that May in favor of funding to buy the land from Trump.[124] Condemnation of the site started in 1969.[121] The city ultimately purchased the proposed park's site for $4 million, with partial funding from the federal government. As a condition of the deal, the sale or lease of the future parkland required permission from the New York State Legislature, thus blocking Trump from developing the site as apartments.[125][126]

1970s and early 1980s edit

Trump filed a series of court cases related to the proposed residential rezoning and ultimately won a $1.3 million judgment.[121] After the city acquired the land, Kaufman began leasing the site from the city in 1970.[127] The city also leased out the boardwalk and parking lot sites at extremely low rates, which resulted in a $1 million loss of revenue over the following seven years. Since the city wanted to build the state park on the site of Kaufman's Steeplechase Park, it attempted to evict him by refusing to grant a lease extension.[128] The city government first tried to evict Kaufman by refusing to give licenses to any of his rides, but Kaufman continued to operate rides there, even after one of his employees died in 1974.[129] A state judge granted the city the right to evict Kaufman in December 1974 but ruled that Kaufman could stay through the 1975 season.[130]

NYC Parks was supposed to have devised a plan for the proposed state park in 1969, but it never did so.[120] Under the terms of Kaufman's lease, the city could evict him with 30 days' notice once it had devised a plan for a park.[127] Due to the city's inaction, in 1975, the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development nearly withdrew a proposed grant of $2 million for the park.[128] The city ultimately accepted the grant.[120] In early 1977, city officials again attempted to evict Kaufman and force him to pay back rent, but a state judge rejected these claims.[127][131] That June, the city's parks commissioner suggested that the city would redevelop the original Steeplechase Park's site as an amusement area instead of an open-air state park and proposed that the city return the grant. This move was opposed by the chairman of the New York City Planning Commission, who wanted to use the grant to pay for pedestrian walkways at the Steeplechase site.[120]

In 1977 and 1978, Kaufman withheld rent payments to the city because of the ongoing litigation, and he sued the city for $1.7 million. By 1979, Kaufman had expanded his park and had plans to eventually rebuild the historic Steeplechase Park. He had also bought back the original Steeplechase horse ride with plans to install it the following season.[121] Kaufman continued to operate the site until the end of summer 1980. In June 1981, the city paid Kaufman a million dollars for the rides, even though the amusements were estimated to be worth much less than that. However, the city had finally succeeded in evicting Kaufman from the property.[132][126]

Development as stadium edit

In the mid-1980s, restaurant mogul Horace Bullard proposed rebuilding Steeplechase Park. He had already bought several acres of property just east of the Steeplechase Park site, including the site of the defunct Thunderbolt coaster and the lots west of the Abe Stark rink, and planned to spend $20 million just on cleaning up the neighborhood.[133][126] He called for using the property, bounded by West 15th and West 19th Streets between Surf Avenue and the Boardwalk, to build a $55 million amusement park based on the original. The city agreed, and the project was approved in 1985.[133][125] Bullard planned to open the park by mid-1986 to coincide with the Statue of Liberty's centennial celebration.[125] The project was delayed while the New York City Planning Commission compiled an environmental impact report.[134] The New York City Council and the State Legislature also had to agree to lease some of the land to Bullard, but the legislative bodies did not give their approval until mid-1986.[135] By early 1987, the cost of the amusement park had nearly doubled to $100 million.[136] The city government gave final approval to Bullard's plans in 1989, at which point the park was supposed to cost $250 million and open in May 1992.[137]

 
Maimonides Park, a minor-league baseball stadium built on the Steeplechase site in 2001

Concurrently, in December 1986, the New York State Urban Development Corporation formally proposed the construction of a $58 million, 17,000-seat minor-league baseball stadium near the site.[138][139] State senator Thomas Bartosiewicz attempted to block Bullard from building on the Steeplechase site, as he was part of an organization that had promised another developer, Sportsplex, the right to build an amateur sports arena on the site.[136][139] Construction was held up for another four years as Bullard and Sportsplex fought over the site.[140]

After Rudy Giuliani took office as mayor of New York in 1994, he negated the Bullard deal by approving the construction of a minor-league baseball stadium on the site allotted for Steeplechase Park.[133] In 1998, Giuliani had canceled Sportsplex and the entertainment complex, and instead unveiled another plan where only the parking lot would be built.[141] The minor league team was called the Brooklyn Cyclones. Bullard, now no longer rebuilding Steeplechase Park, had wanted to restore the Thunderbolt as part of a scaled-down amusement park. Giuliani had the coaster demolished on the grounds that the Thunderbolt was about to collapse, though the coaster's destruction took weeks.[133] In 2000, the city approved the $31 million Keyspan Park (now Maimonides Park), which used funds from the canceled Sportsplex.[142] The 6,500-seat minor-league baseball stadium opened the following year,[143] in conjunction with the Brooklyn Cyclones' inaugural season in 2001.[144]

Current status edit

 
B&B Carousell under construction at new Steeplechase Plaza

Much of the former Steeplechase Park site is occupied by Maimonides Park. The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation owns the 10 acres (4.0 ha) land under Maimonides Park and maintains it as "Steeplechase Park". A public plaza on the boardwalk is located to the south of Maimonides Park and operated by NYC Parks.[145]

In November 2011, work started on a 2.2-acre (0.89 ha) site around the Parachute Jump, to be called Steeplechase Plaza.[146] The city also announced that the historic B&B Carousell, which had been stored at the Brooklyn Army Terminal since 2005, would be relocated to Steeplechase Plaza within Luna Park.[147][146] The carousel opened in 2013[148][149][150] at the Steeplechase Plaza section of Luna Park, near the former site of Steeplechase Park.[151][146] The carousel was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.[152][153] The plaza is adjacent to Thunderbolt, a steel coaster that opened in 2014 on the site of the original wooden Thunderbolt.[154]

The only structure still standing that was once part of Steeplechase is the Parachute Jump.[20][78][80] It had been proposed for demolition in the mid-20th century. Due to the expense involved in destruction, the ride outlived the remainder of the park, operating until 1964.[155] Still too expensive to tear down, the tower was made a New York City designated landmark in 1977.[155] Three months later the New York City Board of Estimate overturned the landmark designation, citing doubts about the tower's structural integrity.[156] In 1980, the Parachute Jump was placed on the National Register of Historic Places,[78] and in 1989, the Parachute Jump was once again recognized as a city landmark.[156][157]

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

  • Berman, J.S.; Museum of the City of New York (2003). Coney Island. Portraits of America. Barnes and Noble Books. ISBN 978-0-7607-3887-0. from the original on July 21, 2021.
  • DeSena, Judith N.; Shortell, Timothy (2012). The World in Brooklyn: Gentrification, Immigration, and Ethnic Politics in a Global City. Lexington Books. pp. 147–176. ISBN 978-0-7391-6670-3. from the original on May 7, 2016.
  • Hoffman, L.J. (2014). Coney Island. Postcard History. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4671-2131-6. from the original on July 21, 2021.
  • Ierardi, E.J. (2001). Gravesend: The Home of Coney Island. The making of America. Arcadia. ISBN 978-0-7385-2361-3. from the original on July 21, 2021.
  • Immerso, Michael (2002). Coney Island: the people's playground (illustrated ed.). Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-3138-0. from the original on November 8, 2021.
  • Reiss, Marcia (2014). Lost Brooklyn. Rizzoli. ISBN 978-1-909815-66-7. from the original on April 24, 2023.
  • Silverman, S.M. (2019). The Amusement Park: 900 Years of Thrills and Spills, and the Dreamers and Schemers Who Built Them. Running Press. ISBN 978-0-316-41647-4. from the original on July 21, 2021.

External links edit

  • Oral histories about Steeplechase Park collected by the Coney Island History Project
  • NYC Parks website

steeplechase, park, amusement, park, that, operated, coney, island, neighborhood, brooklyn, york, city, united, states, from, 1897, 1964, created, entrepreneur, george, tilyou, first, three, large, amusement, parks, built, coney, island, other, being, luna, pa. Steeplechase Park was an amusement park that operated in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City United States from 1897 to 1964 Steeplechase Park was created by the entrepreneur George C Tilyou as the first of the three large amusement parks built on Coney Island the other two being Luna Park 1903 and Dreamland 1904 Of the three Steeplechase was the longest lasting running for 67 years Steeplechase ParkEntrance to Steeplechase ParkLocationBrooklyn New York United StatesCoordinates40 34 27 N 73 58 50 W 40 57417 N 73 98056 W 40 57417 73 98056StatusDefunctOpened1897 1 Closed1964OwnerGeorge C TilyouOperated byTilyou familyGeneral managerGeorge C Tilyou 1897 1914 Thomas F McGowan 1914 1927 James J Onorato 1927 1959 Marie Tilyou 1959 1964 Area15 acres 6 1 ha The park covered 15 acres 6 1 ha at its peak Its first rides were standalone attractions scattered around Coney Island that Tilyou had purchased in the early 1890s Steeplechase itself opened in 1897 to unite these formerly separate attractions and quickly gained popularity as a family friendly destination with exhibitionist and risque undertones It was destroyed by fire in 1907 but was quickly rebuilt Steeplechase remained profitable as the Tilyou family continually brought in new rides and new amusements such as the Parachute Jump However by the 1960s Steeplechase Park was becoming unprofitable due to high crime the growth of suburban getaways and the area s general trend toward residential development After the park closed in 1964 developer Fred Trump purchased the land and planned to develop it for residential use but this never occurred and the site was used seasonally for amusement rides during the 1970s A dispute ensued over the proposed use of the Steeplechase Park site in the 1980s and 1990s as two developers disagreed over whether to rebuild the amusement park or build a sports complex on the site A minor league baseball stadium called Keyspan Park now Maimonides Park was built in 2001 The Parachute Jump is the only remaining portion of the former amusement park The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation maintains the land under Maimonides Park as part of a green space also called Steeplechase Park Steeplechase Plaza a portion of Luna Park 2010 that contains the B amp B Carousell was named in homage to the former Steeplechase Park Contents 1 History 1 1 1897 1907 Creation and early years 1 2 1907 fire and rebuilding 1 3 1910s and 1920s 1 4 1930s Great Depression through World War II 1 5 1940s and 1950s downfall 1 6 Demise 2 Later use of the site 2 1 Trump ownership and Kaufman operation 2 1 1 1960s 2 1 2 1970s and early 1980s 2 2 Development as stadium 3 Current status 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Sources 5 External linksHistory editSteeplechase was created by George C Tilyou 1862 1914 2 On his honeymoon in 1893 he and his wife visited the World s Columbian Exposition in Chicago where he saw the 250 foot diameter 76 m Ferris wheel and wanted to buy it Since the wheel had already been sold Tilyou built his own half size version at Surf Avenue on Coney Island which soon became Coney Island s biggest attraction 3 4 5 After noting that the nearby Sheepshead Bay Gravesend and Brighton Beach horseracing tracks were very popular Tilyou added other rides and attractions on the Coney Island peninsula He came to own several rides though none were part of a single park In fact until the opening of Paul Boyton s Sea Lion Park nearby in 1895 all of Coney Island s rides were separately operated 6 7 As a result Tilyou s concessions were originally overshadowed by the saloons on nearby Bowery Street 5 1897 1907 Creation and early years edit nbsp The steeplechase ride Steeplechase Park opened in 1897 after Tilyou bought and improved the Steeplechase Horses attraction 7 8 Steeplechase Horses manufactured by J W Cawdry featured gravity pulled mechanical horses racing along metal tracks 6 9 The park covered 15 acres 6 1 ha an area of which Tilyou owned two thirds outright the other third was leased from the Huber family It was located at the western end of Bowery Street 3 9 10 Steeplechase was approached by a grand stone archway on Surf Avenue to the north the top of the archway decorated by four stone horses The inclusion of a gateway along with a new 25 cent admission charge were intended to exclude the seedier elements and make the park a family destination Drinking was prohibited as was gambling and prostitution 10 11 12 The park included over 50 attractions on its midway alone 13 Attractions included novelties such as the Human Niagara a Venetian gondola style ride the Aerial Racing Slide the Double Dip Chutes the Bicycle Railway a French Voyage panorama and a Wild West sideshow 14 15 Tilyou also operated a small steam railroad a saltwater pool a ballroom and the Scenic Railroad coaster by LaMarcus Thompson 3 Completing the park were scale models of world landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower and Big Ben 16 Steeplechase Pier a pier jutting into the ocean was built to the south of the park in 1904 17 Tilyou adopted a Funny Face mascot depicting a smiling man with several dozen teeth nicknamed the Tilly as the icon for his park The mascot which became a symbol of Coney Island represented the area s wholesomeness and neoclassical architecture combined with its veneer of hidden sexuality 14 10 18 19 Tilyou s personal motto Keep em laughing was symbolized by rides with such unconventional names as Whirlpool Soup Bowl Human Roulette Human Pool Table and Earthquake Staircase 5 nbsp An admissions ticket for Steeplechase Park from 1905 George C Tilyou s Funny Face logo became the iconic symbol of Coney Island 10 In 1901 Tilyou visited the Pan American Exposition at Buffalo New York to find additional rides for Steeplechase Park He approached Frederic Thompson no relation to LaMarcus and Elmer Skip Dundy the creators of the popular A Trip To The Moon ride to ask if they would bring their ride to Steeplechase 7 3 20 The ride an indoor dark ride that simulated a space flight had been popular in the exposition and Thompson and Dundy signed an agreement to relocate it to Steeplechase for a year However a rainy 1902 season reduced the profits of amusement park operators at Coney Island that year and forced the closure of the adjacent Sea Lion Park Thompson and Dundy spent 700 000 rebuilding Sea Lion and moved Trip to the Moon to the newly expanded park now called Luna Park in 1903 3 21 22 Following Luna Park s success another amusement park on Coney Island Dreamland opened in 1904 23 At Coney Island s peak in the middle of the 20th century s first decade the three amusement parks competed with each other and with many independent amusements 24 25 This was attributed partially to the variety of transit options available by 1904 there were five railroads to Coney Island 7 Both Luna Park and Dreamland had more expensive attractions than Steeplechase Park Tilyou countered this by modifying and adding contraptions for his customers most of which carried an exhibitionist and risque undertone but were nonetheless popular despite their vulgarity 3 23 22 26 The entrance contained the Barrel of Love a 30 by 10 foot 9 1 by 3 0 m revolving drum that threw visitors onto each other Other contraptions included the Human Roulette Wheel Earthquake Stairway Dew Drop Whichway and Wedding Ring All of these rides tossed riders around often on top of each other as they were designed under the assumption that men and women wanted any excuses to grab onto each other 23 26 nbsp Map of Steeplechase Park as seen in 1906 The success of Steeplechase and other parks in Coney Island inspired Tilyou to create additional amusement parks in the New York City area and elsewhere 27 In November 1904 Tilyou announced that he would sell Steeplechase Park to a syndicate of investors for 1 25 million since he wanted to operate another amusement park in Rockaway Queens 28 However the sale of Steeplechase was annulled in February 1905 after 50 000 had been paid since defective titles prevented the syndicate from purchasing some of the land under the park 29 From 1905 to 1907 Tilyou refined Steeplechase Park with attractions such as a miniature railroad an orchestra stand the Cave of the Winds a Fads and Fantasy Building the Limit Building and a children s pony track The Limit Building was short lived being replaced by the Monte Carlo Building in 1907 3 26 1907 fire and rebuilding edit In the early morning of July 29 1907 a fire started in the Cave of the Winds attraction It spread quickly destroying most of the wooden pavilions and hotels around Bowery Street firefighters fought to save Tilyou s house at the corner of Steeplechase Park The three alarm fire was extinguished after two hours but about 35 acres 14 ha of Coney Island was destroyed Steeplechase Park bore much of the damage which was estimated at 1 5 million but several hotels were also ruined 30 31 Even though the fire destroyed nearly everything within Steeplechase Park Tilyou reportedly remained calm throughout even promising to host events that had been planned in the park before the fire 22 32 The morning after the fire Tilyou posted a sign in front of the park which read To My Friends I have troubles today that I had not yesterday I had troubles yesterday which I have not today On this site will be built a bigger better Steeplechase Park Admission to the burning ruins Ten cents 15 33 Tilyou stated that the park would be restored to a grander than ever condition but in the meantime he would erect temporary tent shows 34 The remaining attractions opened one week after the fire 15 Ultimately the park was rebuilt with fireproof steel and concrete structures as the municipality had passed a law restricting the construction of combustible wooden structures 35 36 The park s reconstruction was funded by a 2 million stock measure issued by the Steeplechase Park Company which Tilyou established in 1908 37 Tilyou sold 100 000 shares in that company to the public and gave a season pass to everyone who bought a 5 stock certificate 38 The park partially reopened in April 1908 39 40 The New York Times described the construction as scarcely finished and that crowds flocked to the rebuilt attractions 40 nbsp A decorative indoor elephant in Steeplechase s vast Pavilion of Fun by Eugene Wemlinger 1910 Brooklyn Museum The reconstruction was completed in 1909 41 The rebuilt park s main attraction was the Pavilion of Fun a steel and glass enclosure measuring 450 by 280 feet 137 by 85 m with an area of 2 8 acres 11 000 m2 It contained several rides and tawdry exhibitionist attractions reminiscent of the previous iteration of Steeplechase Park such as the Human Wheel Human Niagara the Mixer and the Grinder 10 42 43 The Pavilion of Fun had opened during the 1908 season 44 The Ferris wheel was salvaged from the original park and was placed outdoors A new Steeplechase Horses attraction was built around the pavilion designed so that riders had to exit through the Pavilion of Fun 45 41 42 Steeplechase also included two new entrances a 300 by 40 foot 91 by 12 m plaza overlooking a sunken garden the Palace of Pleasure a ballroom and various sideshows 41 43 Other attractions included airships Venetian gondolas and an Automobile ride similar to that in the first Steeplechase Park 45 43 There were eight roller coasters inside the rebuilt park as well 45 As before the fire admission was 25 cents A combo admission ticket entitled the holder to one experience on each of the park s 25 attractions 43 1910s and 1920s edit Tilyou continued to add attractions to Steeplechase in the late 1900s and early 1910s He added the first of several carousels to the park in 1908 and the World s Largest Swimming Pool was completed the following year 43 42 Tilyou opened a hall with an indoor swimming pool to the west of the pavilion in 1911 at which point he declared that he wanted to add one new ride per week 46 Several attractions opened in 1912 including the El Dorado Carousel and other structures salvaged from Dreamland after it was destroyed in a 1911 fire 42 Around this time local residents and businesspeople were advocating for the construction of a public beach and boardwalk along the Atlantic Ocean 47 The New York Supreme Court ruled in 1913 that the state government could take over a 633 by 126 foot 193 by 38 m section of Steeplechase Park along the Atlantic shoreline to make way for the public beach 48 49 nbsp El Dorado Carousel now located at the Toshimaen amusement park in Tokyo nbsp Outdoor pool seen in 1912 In 1914 Tilyou died leaving the care of the park to his children Thomas F McGowan then became general manager of the park 43 42 10 Steeplechase would remain within the Tilyou family until it closed a half century later 10 George s oldest son Edward an 18 year old at the time of his father s death constructed a skating rink at Steeplechase in 1915 43 A Racing Derby Carousel by master carousel builder Marcus Illions was added in 1920 and it featured 16 rows of four horses cycling up and down on small tracks within the carousel Shortly afterward Edward Tilyou also added Babyland a children s play area near the southeast corner of the park 42 50 Other attractions built in the early 1920s included the Frolic spinning ride bumper cars the Witchway swing and a Caterpillar flat ride 43 By the early 1920s the crowds at Steeplechase and other Coney Island parks had become more mellow and orderly though the beachfront in general was described as rundown 51 Steeplechase Park started hosting several beauty contests near its outdoor pool providing more entertainment for park patrons These included the Modern Venus Bathing Beauty Contest first held in 1922 and Grandma s Beauty Contest which started in 1932 43 42 52 This period also saw the destruction of some structures such as the Upside Down House burning down in 1911 53 Additionally Steeplechase lost its private beach during the early 1910s 43 54 Following a 1912 lawsuit by New York State against Tilyou and other amusement owners for taking private ownership of Coney Island s beach 55 a judge ruled in 1913 that the beach actually belonged to the state 54 An appellate court affirmed this decision in 1916 with an exception made for part of Steeplechase Park a plot of land granted by the state prior to the creation of the park itself 56 All obstructions on the beachfront including a concrete walk within Steeplechase were demolished in accordance with the ruling 57 The Riegelmann Boardwalk was opened on the waterfront in 1922 58 In conjunction with the boardwalk s opening the city slightly relocated West 16th and West 19th Streets at Steeplechase Park s eastern and western borders respectively which resulted in a slight expansion to Steeplechase s area 59 The boardwalk s opening resulted in increases to real estate valuations at nearby areas such as Steeplechase Park 60 though some lots were also taken from the park to make way for new streets leading to the boardwalk 61 As a result a former Brooklyn engineer alleged that the Tilyous lost money from the relocation of West 16th and West 19th Streets 59 The boardwalk s completion and a subsequent widening of Surf Avenue in 1924 prompted Edward Tilyou to make additional improvements to Steeplechase Park 43 The mid 1920s were described as the golden age of roller coasters on Coney Island two gravity rides called the Zip and the Limit were constructed in Steeplechase Park and immediately to the east independent ride operator George Moran built the Thunderbolt roller coaster 62 Also built were a water ride called the Old Mill tunnel of love 63 64 and a Noah s Ark style attraction 65 Thomas McGowan died unexpectedly in 1927 and was replaced by James J Onorato The following year one of the pools was demolished and replaced with an attraction called Hey Day while a gas powered Custer Cars attraction was installed on the boardwalk 43 1930s Great Depression through World War II edit The Great Depression resulted in significantly decreased attendance at Steeplechase Park 42 66 Before money ran out a one ring circus was constructed between the Limit coaster and an adjacent pool while a children s wading pool was constructed In addition a carousel was constructed at West 16th Street in 1930 and the Whale and the Whip replaced Noah s Ark the following year 43 People still came to see the beauty contests at Steeplechase Park 42 In 1934 when finances slowly started to improve a bobsled roller coaster model called Flying Turns was installed at Steeplechase 67 68 Several accidents and fires continued to occur at Steeplechase 43 A fire in July 1932 caused 1 5 million in damage and injured six people 69 70 and left at least a thousand people homeless 71 However Steeplechase Park and Luna Park were not as heavily damaged since the fire was mostly concentrated to the west 70 There were other incidents as well in 1933 fifty seven people were hurt in a balcony collapse caused by overcrowding 72 73 and three years later a barge crashed into the Steeplechase Pier In addition patrons frequently received minor injuries such as friction burns though some people were thrown or fell from rides and one child died after falling off the Steeplechase Horses in 1935 43 42 A conflagration in September 1939 caused 200 000 in damage and injured 18 people The concessions on the boardwalk were destroyed as was the entrance to the park from the boardwalk and several attractions within the park itself 74 75 The following year a new brick concession structure was built on the site of the old concessions and an Express Train ride was erected in front of the pavilion 43 nbsp The Parachute Jump acquired by Steeplechase from the 1939 New York World s Fair still stands The 1939 New York World s Fair in Flushing Meadows Corona Park several miles to the northeast of Coney Island had created competition for Coney Island amusement parks which saw sharply reduced attendance Steeplechase s situation was exacerbated by the September 1939 fire which had destroyed many of the larger attractions including Flying Turns 43 After the World s Fair closed in 1940 the Tilyous purchased the fair s Parachute Jump a parachute tower ride and moved it to the former site of Flying Turns The ride inspired by a training device for paratroopers opened in 1941 and contained 12 parachutes descending from a 250 foot tall 76 m tower 76 77 78 The Parachute Jump s installation was part of a reconstruction of an 800 foot 240 m stretch of the Riegelmann Boardwalk 79 Other rides were added at Steeplechase in 1941 including rocket cars a Whip ride and the Silver Streak The draft during World War II resulted in a shortage of qualified staff and Onorato temporarily closed the Pavilion of Fun in 1945 due to the staff shortage 43 42 79 Only 70 people worked at Steeplechase that year compared to 300 in a normal operating year the park returned to normal staffing levels in 1946 79 1940s and 1950s downfall edit Despite the park s popularity with New Yorkers many factors after the end of World War II would eventually lead to its decline including frequent fires low patronage and white flight 80 Steeplechase s closest competitor Luna Park was heavily damaged by a pair of fires in 1944 81 Luna Park closed in 1946 leaving Steeplechase as the only major amusement park on Coney Island 82 Moreover after Edward Tilyou died in 1944 83 control of the park was transferred to his siblings George Jr Frank Marie and Eileen who each owned a quarter share in the Steeplechase Corporation The relationship between the siblings was fractious and they often argued about Steeplechase s management 43 42 In 1945 the Tilyou siblings leased out the boardwalk carousel to their cousin James J McCullough 43 They rented out the pool in 1946 the pool s new operators instituted a season pass scheme that effectively locked out African Americans from using the pool despite the fact that an increasing proportion of Steeplechase visitors was African American 42 84 Park officials also discontinued the use of a flat admission fee and began selling tickets at three prices 85 The ballroom was also split in half to create a TV studio in 1947 The same year the Tilyou siblings discontinued the combination ticket and started offering a pass where patrons could go on any 15 rides for one dollar In practice not many people bought the 15 ride pass since various special interest groups such as social political and religious organizations had designated days where they could visit Steeplechase Park for free 43 Steeplechase also saw its 20 millionth visitor that year 86 The Tilyous added extra rides for the 1948 season including the Scrambler the C Cruise and several children s rides 43 Onorato added a lost kids department at the park in 1951 for children who had become separated from their guardians 87 Steeplechase Park continued its downward trajectory with the demolition of several rides and structures and the neglect of others The skating rink now used only for the Tilyous private functions was demolished in December 1951 The following year several structures on West 19th Street were demolished as was the little used Old Mill boat ride that ran under one of these structures the site was filled by a parking lot in 1954 Other impediments included a 1953 flood and fire which destroyed machinery the death of the Tilyou siblings mother in 1954 which caused further acrimony among the siblings and the underpayment of employees which was one of the main reasons Steeplechases employees were mostly elderly citizens who could afford to take such a low wage The park started becoming profitable again when Arthur Godfrey and His Friends started broadcasting from Steeplechase in 1955 43 42 After Steeplechase Pier was destroyed by fire in 1957 88 89 a larger replacement opened the next year 90 George Tilyou Jr died in 1958 91 and his sister Marie took over as Steeplechase Corporation president the next year demoting James Onorato to general manager Marie who had long wanted to change Steeplechase s image against the wishes of her brothers began adding rides for the 1959 and 1960 seasons such as a Tilt a Whirl a Round Up ride and a Paratrooper ride 43 Demise edit New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses was a longtime critic of Coney Island describing the beach as so crowded that bathers had less room than in a coffin 92 As early as 1937 he had published a report about the possible redevelopment of Coney Island 93 Moses who was also a New York City housing commissioner rezoned the area for high rise housing in the late 1940s 94 Subsequently in 1953 Moses proposed that most of the peninsula be rezoned for various uses claiming that it would be an upgrade over the various business and unrestricted zones that existed at the time Steeplechase Park would be allowed to remain open but much of the shorefront amusements and concessions would be replaced by residential developments 95 96 At the time Coney Island was seeing fewer visitors year over year Crime increases insufficient parking facilities bad weather and the post World War II automotive boom were cited as contributing factors in the decrease of visitors to Coney Island The start of the 1964 New York World s Fair also in Flushing Meadows Corona Park was another factor 97 Ironically prior to the World s Fair Steeplechase Park was seeing record high patronage the highest single day visitor count over 18 000 customers was recorded in 1961 Nevertheless it also faced problems of its own a severe assault of an employee in 1961 forced the closure of the Insanitorium while Marie Tilyou was opposed to her nephew Frank II s proposal to bring rides from the Century 21 Exposition to the park Further Steeplechase had been leasing one third of its land from the Huber family which decided to sell that land in 1962 43 More attractions were destroyed in a 1963 fire which razed two blocks on Steeplechase s west side 98 High crime was also rampant for instance a mass shooting nearby in 1962 resulted in three people being killed 99 and visitors were generally afraid of being attacked by residents of nearby public housing projects 42 By 1964 the area had seen its lowest number of patrons in a quarter century 97 The Tilyou family was paying 120 000 annually in taxes 100 By the early 1960s the children of George C Tilyou were themselves aging his last surviving son Frank died in 1964 101 The shares of Steeplechase Park were now held by four women Marie Eileen and the respective widows of Frank and George Jr all of whom had differing visions for the park 43 Steeplechase Park closed for the season on September 20 1964 for what would be the last time 102 103 Though no official closure announcement was made rumors of a sale started circulating in February 1965 104 105 Developer Fred Trump bought the property for 2 5 million 100 on July 1 1965 and announced his intention to build luxury apartments on the old Steeplechase property 106 107 Though the sale was opposed by the Coney Island Chamber of Commerce it was consistent with the area s gradual conversion into a residential community 108 At the time of its closure Steeplechase Park was Coney Island s longest lasting attraction it had outlasted the original park s steeplechase attractions by more than a half century 20 Later use of the site editTrump ownership and Kaufman operation edit 1960s edit nbsp A 1973 photo of an abandoned Giant Slide that had been set up for a few years on the old Steeplechase site Trump demolished Steeplechase Park s Pavilion of Fun during a highly publicized ceremony in September 1966 103 109 At the demolition he was said to have sold bricks to ceremony guests to smash the remaining glass windows on the Pavilion of Fun 80 110 111 Trump supposedly destroyed the pavilion to circumvent a landmark law being proposed by the city following the demolition of the old Pennsylvania Station in 1963 20 111 Mechanical horses from Steeplechase Park were sold to a park in Dania Beach Florida 20 112 while the El Dorado Carousel was first placed into storage in New Jersey and then sent to Japan 113 On part of Steeplechase Park s site Trump proposed building a 160 foot high 49 m enclosed dome with recreational facilities and a convention center designed by Morris Lapidus 114 115 Brooklyn borough president Abe Stark supported the proposal 114 while the Coney Island Chamber of Commerce opposed the plans saying the proposed dome was too small to accommodate recreational uses 115 Trump wanted to build four 30 story apartment towers with a total of 3 000 apartments on the remainder of the site 116 The Coney Island Chamber of Commerce submitted plans to Stark for a 12 5 acre 5 1 ha resort on Steeplechase Park s site in December 1965 117 In October 1966 the city announced its plans to acquire the former park so that the land could be reserved for recreational use 118 Although residents supported the city s action Trump called the city s proposal wasteful 119 The New York City Planning Commission rezoned the Steeplechase site for recreational use around 1967 116 The same year 120 Trump started leasing the property to Norman Kaufman who operated fairground amusements on a corner of the site calling his amusement park Steeplechase Park 103 121 Kaufman and his partner Irving Vichinsky operated 53 rides including three roller coasters 122 New York City parks commissioner August Heckscher II proposed in January 1968 that the New York state government build an open space state park on the Steeplechase site 123 and the New York City Board of Estimate voted that May in favor of funding to buy the land from Trump 124 Condemnation of the site started in 1969 121 The city ultimately purchased the proposed park s site for 4 million with partial funding from the federal government As a condition of the deal the sale or lease of the future parkland required permission from the New York State Legislature thus blocking Trump from developing the site as apartments 125 126 1970s and early 1980s edit Trump filed a series of court cases related to the proposed residential rezoning and ultimately won a 1 3 million judgment 121 After the city acquired the land Kaufman began leasing the site from the city in 1970 127 The city also leased out the boardwalk and parking lot sites at extremely low rates which resulted in a 1 million loss of revenue over the following seven years Since the city wanted to build the state park on the site of Kaufman s Steeplechase Park it attempted to evict him by refusing to grant a lease extension 128 The city government first tried to evict Kaufman by refusing to give licenses to any of his rides but Kaufman continued to operate rides there even after one of his employees died in 1974 129 A state judge granted the city the right to evict Kaufman in December 1974 but ruled that Kaufman could stay through the 1975 season 130 NYC Parks was supposed to have devised a plan for the proposed state park in 1969 but it never did so 120 Under the terms of Kaufman s lease the city could evict him with 30 days notice once it had devised a plan for a park 127 Due to the city s inaction in 1975 the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development nearly withdrew a proposed grant of 2 million for the park 128 The city ultimately accepted the grant 120 In early 1977 city officials again attempted to evict Kaufman and force him to pay back rent but a state judge rejected these claims 127 131 That June the city s parks commissioner suggested that the city would redevelop the original Steeplechase Park s site as an amusement area instead of an open air state park and proposed that the city return the grant This move was opposed by the chairman of the New York City Planning Commission who wanted to use the grant to pay for pedestrian walkways at the Steeplechase site 120 In 1977 and 1978 Kaufman withheld rent payments to the city because of the ongoing litigation and he sued the city for 1 7 million By 1979 Kaufman had expanded his park and had plans to eventually rebuild the historic Steeplechase Park He had also bought back the original Steeplechase horse ride with plans to install it the following season 121 Kaufman continued to operate the site until the end of summer 1980 In June 1981 the city paid Kaufman a million dollars for the rides even though the amusements were estimated to be worth much less than that However the city had finally succeeded in evicting Kaufman from the property 132 126 Development as stadium edit In the mid 1980s restaurant mogul Horace Bullard proposed rebuilding Steeplechase Park He had already bought several acres of property just east of the Steeplechase Park site including the site of the defunct Thunderbolt coaster and the lots west of the Abe Stark rink and planned to spend 20 million just on cleaning up the neighborhood 133 126 He called for using the property bounded by West 15th and West 19th Streets between Surf Avenue and the Boardwalk to build a 55 million amusement park based on the original The city agreed and the project was approved in 1985 133 125 Bullard planned to open the park by mid 1986 to coincide with the Statue of Liberty s centennial celebration 125 The project was delayed while the New York City Planning Commission compiled an environmental impact report 134 The New York City Council and the State Legislature also had to agree to lease some of the land to Bullard but the legislative bodies did not give their approval until mid 1986 135 By early 1987 the cost of the amusement park had nearly doubled to 100 million 136 The city government gave final approval to Bullard s plans in 1989 at which point the park was supposed to cost 250 million and open in May 1992 137 nbsp Maimonides Park a minor league baseball stadium built on the Steeplechase site in 2001 Concurrently in December 1986 the New York State Urban Development Corporation formally proposed the construction of a 58 million 17 000 seat minor league baseball stadium near the site 138 139 State senator Thomas Bartosiewicz attempted to block Bullard from building on the Steeplechase site as he was part of an organization that had promised another developer Sportsplex the right to build an amateur sports arena on the site 136 139 Construction was held up for another four years as Bullard and Sportsplex fought over the site 140 After Rudy Giuliani took office as mayor of New York in 1994 he negated the Bullard deal by approving the construction of a minor league baseball stadium on the site allotted for Steeplechase Park 133 In 1998 Giuliani had canceled Sportsplex and the entertainment complex and instead unveiled another plan where only the parking lot would be built 141 The minor league team was called the Brooklyn Cyclones Bullard now no longer rebuilding Steeplechase Park had wanted to restore the Thunderbolt as part of a scaled down amusement park Giuliani had the coaster demolished on the grounds that the Thunderbolt was about to collapse though the coaster s destruction took weeks 133 In 2000 the city approved the 31 million Keyspan Park now Maimonides Park which used funds from the canceled Sportsplex 142 The 6 500 seat minor league baseball stadium opened the following year 143 in conjunction with the Brooklyn Cyclones inaugural season in 2001 144 Current status edit nbsp B amp B Carousell under construction at new Steeplechase Plaza Much of the former Steeplechase Park site is occupied by Maimonides Park The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation owns the 10 acres 4 0 ha land under Maimonides Park and maintains it as Steeplechase Park A public plaza on the boardwalk is located to the south of Maimonides Park and operated by NYC Parks 145 In November 2011 work started on a 2 2 acre 0 89 ha site around the Parachute Jump to be called Steeplechase Plaza 146 The city also announced that the historic B amp B Carousell which had been stored at the Brooklyn Army Terminal since 2005 would be relocated to Steeplechase Plaza within Luna Park 147 146 The carousel opened in 2013 148 149 150 at the Steeplechase Plaza section of Luna Park near the former site of Steeplechase Park 151 146 The carousel was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016 152 153 The plaza is adjacent to Thunderbolt a steel coaster that opened in 2014 on the site of the original wooden Thunderbolt 154 The only structure still standing that was once part of Steeplechase is the Parachute Jump 20 78 80 It had been proposed for demolition in the mid 20th century Due to the expense involved in destruction the ride outlived the remainder of the park operating until 1964 155 Still too expensive to tear down the tower was made a New York City designated landmark in 1977 155 Three months later the New York City Board of Estimate overturned the landmark designation citing doubts about the tower s structural integrity 156 In 1980 the Parachute Jump was placed on the National Register of Historic Places 78 and in 1989 the Parachute Jump was once again recognized as a city landmark 156 157 References editCitations edit Denson Charles 2002 Coney Island Lost and Found Berkeley Calif Ten Speed Press ISBN 9781580084550 George C Tilyou Coney Island History Project May 22 2015 Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 a b c d e f g First Steeplechase Park Coney Island History March 1 1998 Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 Williams Jasmin K June 6 2007 New York s Beachfront Playground New York Post Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 a b c Reiss 2014 p 114 a b Spellen Suzanne April 19 2011 Amusement Parks Brownstoner Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 a b c d Maeder Jay August 14 2017 Coney Island How a Brooklyn beach getaway became an iconic theme park nydailynews com Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 Hoffman 2014 p 33 a b Ierardi 2001 p 68 a b c d e f g Cross G S 2005 The Playful Crowd Pleasure Places in the Twentieth Century Columbia University Press pp 39 40 ISBN 978 0 231 12724 0 Hoffman 2014 pp 17 18 Immerso 2002 p 56 Immerso 2002 p 57 a b Ierardi 2001 p 69 a b c Immerso 2002 p 77 Silverman 2019 p 315 Coney Island Riegelmann Boardwalk PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission May 15 2018 p 9 Archived PDF from the original on June 28 2018 Retrieved July 18 2019 Goldfield David R 2006 Encyclopedia of American urban history Thousand Oaks Sage Publications p 185 ISBN 978 1 4522 6553 7 OCLC 162105753 Bredderman Will May 30 2014 The Face of Steeplechase at the Coney Island History Project Brooklyn Paper Archived from the original on July 9 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b c d e Reiss 2014 p 117 Immerso 2002 p 61 a b c Spellen Suzanne April 21 2011 Coney Island Part 2 Brownstoner Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b c Immerso 2002 p 68 DeSena amp Shortell 2012 p 147 150 Parascandola L J 2014 A Coney Island Reader Through Dizzy Gates of Illusion Columbia University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 231 53819 0 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved January 20 2019 a b c Berman amp Museum of the City of New York 2003 p 32 Silverman 2019 p 316 Big Resort Sold New York Tribune November 3 1904 p 14 Archived from the original on January 12 2023 Retrieved July 14 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Hitch in Steeplechase Sale New York Tribune February 5 1905 p 11 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Coney Swept by 1 500 000 Fire Steeplechase Park and Blocks of Flimsy Bowery Buildings in Ruins The New York Times July 29 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Investigating Fire at Coney No More Tinsel Buildings Brooklyn Citizen July 29 1907 pp 1 10 via newspapers com nbsp Geo C Tilyou Stoic Hero of Coney Island Brooklyn Daily Eagle July 30 1907 p 3 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 11 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Berman amp Museum of the City of New York 2003 p 33 Coney To Rebuild In Same Old Style Fire Swept Area Will Soon Be Recovered with Wodden Amusement Halls The New York Times July 30 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 New Steeplechase to Cost 1 000 000 Tilyou Plans Amusement Palace and Pavilion of Fun for Coney Island The New York Times December 29 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 New Steeplechase on Magnificent Scale Brooklyn Daily Eagle December 29 1907 p 23 Archived from the original on January 12 2023 Retrieved July 11 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Steeplechase Park Co Brooklyn Daily Eagle February 16 1908 p 8 Archived from the original on January 12 2023 Retrieved July 14 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Hakes George H March 21 1908 Work on Coney Island Parks Progressing Rapidly The Billboard Vol 20 no 12 p 8 ProQuest 1031381791 Coney Island a Mecca Draws Crowd of 150 000 Big Scramble for the B R T s 5 cent Fare Rate New York Tribune April 27 1908 p 12 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 572090837 a b 125 000 At Coney Many Shows Open Crowds Fill Luna Park Steeplechase Park and Other Amusement Places The New York Times April 27 1908 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 a b c The Lambs Gambol Brooklyn Amusements Greater Dreamland Opening Steeplechase Park The New York Times May 16 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Spellen Suzanne April 26 2011 Coney Island Part 3 Brownstoner Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Second Steeplechase Park 1908 1964 Coney Island May 20 1998 Archived from the original on June 28 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 Tilyou s New Steeplechase Park Brooklyn Daily Eagle June 7 1908 p 25 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 14 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp a b c Berman amp Museum of the City of New York 2003 p 40 Attractive Steeplechase Park The Brooklyn Citizen May 14 1911 p 19 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp All Coney Island Comes to Fight for Boardwalk New York Tribune May 2 1913 p 16 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 via newspapers com Free Beach Possible at Coney Island Soon Court Decision Opens Way to Clearing Away of Fences Along Waterfront New York Tribune September 28 1913 p 12 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 575153858 Holds Tidal Lands Belong to State Beach at Low Tide Must Not Be Obstructed Justice Benedict s Decision The New York Times September 28 1913 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Fun at Steeplechase Brooklyn Citizen June 19 1921 p 1 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Coney Island of To day Has Few of the Old Time Attractions Left and Still Fewer Old Time Vices The Standard Union June 5 1921 p 25 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Hoffman 2014 p 29 House Upside Down Burned At Coney Steeplechase Park Blaze Draws Immense Crowd but Does Only 3 500 Damage The New York Times September 5 1911 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 15 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b Holds Tidal Lands Belong To State Beach at Low Tide Must Not Be Obstructed Justice Benedict s Decision The New York Times September 28 1913 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 15 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 State Claims Coney Island Contends in Suit Against Tilyou That Beach Belongs to People The New York Times December 21 1912 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 15 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 Court Frees Coney Beach Appeals Tribunal Holds Occupants Have No Right to the Land The New York Times July 13 1916 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 Wreck Buildings at Coney Island Brooklyn Standard Union October 14 1916 p 1 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Coney Boardwalk Opened To The Public Fifty Thousand Persons Promenade Near Extension toSteeplechase Park The New York Times December 25 1922 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 17 2018 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b Says Tilyou Lost By Coney Land Deal Frank D Waterman s Charge of Profits Contradicted by Former Brooklyn Engineer The New York Times October 19 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Valuations Along Coney Boardwalk Jumped 2 000 000 Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 1 1923 p 1 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 14 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Awards 6 139 968 For Land Taken In Coney Street Plan Brooklyn Daily Eagle March 11 1924 p 3 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 22 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Immerso 2002 p 137 Luna and Steeplechase Parks Open the Summer Season at Coney Island The Standard Union May 17 1925 p 13 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Steeplechase Park Brooklyn Daily Eagle May 3 1925 p 71 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 14 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp 200 000 Celebrate Day at Coney Island The Standard Union February 24 1925 p 11 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Berman amp Museum of the City of New York 2003 p 71 Steeplechase Park The Brooklyn Citizen May 26 1934 p 8 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Diane D W Francis D W Francis D D M 2003 The Golden Age of Roller Coasters Postcard history series Arcadia p 51 ISBN 978 0 7385 2338 5 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 16 2019 Early Coney Fires Razed Large Areas The New York Times July 14 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 12 2019 Retrieved July 12 2019 a b 3 000 000 Fire Sweeps Over Coney Island Elmira Star Gazette July 14 1932 p 1 Retrieved July 12 2019 via newspapers com nbsp 1 000 Are Made Homeless One of Resort s Worst Fires Razes Section of Boardwalk The New York Times July 14 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 12 2019 Retrieved July 12 2019 57 Hurt as Coney Balcony Falls The New York Times August 2 1933 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Court Clears Steeplechase in Pool Accident New York Daily News August 3 1933 p 328 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 14 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Coney Area Swept by Fire 200 000 Damage 18 Hurt The New York Times September 15 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 12 2019 Retrieved July 12 2019 500 000 Fire Perils All of Coney Island New York Daily News September 15 1939 p 6 Retrieved July 12 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Beaches Crowded For The Holiday All Resorts in Metropolitan Area Report Near Records for Their Attendance The New York Times May 31 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Hoffman 2014 p 30 a b c Steeplechase Park Highlights Parachute Jump NYC Parks June 26 1939 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 a b c O Connell Tom July 15 1950 Send Em Away With A Smile Is Philosophy of Jim Onorato Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved August 11 2020 a b c Kim Soo December 4 2017 New York s family funfair spoiled by Donald Trump s dad The Telegraph Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Half Of Luna Park Destroyed By Fire As 750 000 Watch Flames Sweep Over 8 Acre Area and Cause 500 000 Loss in 1 1 2 Hour Battle The New York Times August 13 1944 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved July 22 2018 Coney s OId Luna Park Will Yield To New Homes for 625 GI Familie The New York Times August 18 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved July 22 2018 E F Tilyou Is Dead Amusement Figure Manager of Steeplechase Park at Coney Island Which Was Founded by His Father The New York Times June 20 1944 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Immerso 2002 p 169 Ranson Jo May 29 1946 Coney s Nickel Empire Phfft Variety Vol 162 no 12 p 1 56 ProQuest 1285877551 Season Opens at Coney Steeplechase Park Welcomes 20 000 000th Visitor Girl 6 The New York Times May 18 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Get Lost Gets New Meaning The Billboard Vol 63 no 24 June 16 1951 p 50 ProQuest 1040179761 Fire Ruins the Steeplechase Pier Building Floats in Flames to Sea The New York Times April 23 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Dual Probe Launched Into Coney Pier Blaze New York Daily News April 23 1957 p 430 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Steeplechase Pier Reopens The New York Times September 13 1958 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 George C Tilyou Dies Coney Island Operator The Post Star Glens Falls NY December 27 1958 p 11 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Roosevelt Edith Kermit June 1 1957 Coney Isle Fishing For Way to Regain Its Lost Glamour PDF Buffalo Evening News Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 26 2018 via fultonhistory com Moses Robert 1937 Improvement of Coney Island Rockaway and South Beaches Retrieved July 26 2018 via Internet Archive Public Seen Tiring Of Coney Gimmicks Moses Says People Are Turning to Places Like Jones Beach as Against Gadget Resorts The New York Times October 6 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved July 22 2018 Moses Asks Coney Island Rezoning To Upgrade It as Residential Area The New York Times April 2 1953 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 27 2018 Retrieved July 27 2018 Salerno Al October 24 1954 Break Ground for World s Greatest Aquarium at Coney Island Brooklyn Daily Eagle pp 1 21 Archived from the original on July 9 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com a b Coney Island Slump Grows Worse Decline in Business Since the War Years Has Been Steady The New York Times July 2 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Fire Razes Part Of Coney Midway 6 Amusement Places Near Steeplechase Destroyed The New York Times April 29 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 3 Killed and 6 Wounded In Coney Island Gunfight The New York Times September 1 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 a b Aronson Harvey December 4 1965 Steeplechase Part once the pride of Coney Island entertains only memories these days Echoes of Steeplechase Newsday p 14W ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 915327740 Frank S Tilyou Of Coney Island Head of Steeplechase Park Dies in Arizona at 56 The New York Times May 9 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Chan Sewell July 21 2005 Leaps of Imagination for the Parachute Jump The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 9 2019 Retrieved July 6 2019 a b c Immerso 2002 p 172 Coney Island to Lose Its Steeplechase Park Star Gazette Elmira NY February 5 1965 p 2 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved July 15 2019 via newspapers com nbsp The Race Is Over At Steeplechase New York Daily News February 5 1965 p 280 Retrieved April 25 2023 via newspapers com nbsp Steeplechase Park Planned as the Site Of Housing Project The New York Times July 1 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Steeplechase Sold Loses Race to the Sands of Time New York Daily News July 2 1965 p 6 Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 14 2019 via newspapers com nbsp Tolchin Martin July 2 1965 Coney Landmark Is Sold To Trump Apartments May Rise in Steeplechase Park The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 6 Bikinied Beauties Attend Demolishing Of Coney Landmark The New York Times September 22 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 18 2021 Retrieved July 30 2018 Schulz Dana May 17 2016 52 years ago Donald Trump s father demolished Coney Island s beloved Steeplechase Park 6sqft Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 a b Lynch Dennis May 20 2016 Remembering the day Trump s dad destroyed a Coney icon Brooklyn Paper Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Steeplechase Horses From Coney Island Ride a New Course The New York Times April 2 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Schumach Murray March 15 1969 Coney Carrousel Going to Japan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 a b A 160 Foot High Pleasure Dome Is Proposed for Coney Island The New York Times July 24 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 a b Plan for a Fun Dome Snarled At in Coney Newsday July 22 1966 p 2A ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 915516070 a b Whitehouse Franklin March 10 1968 City Insists on Keeping Coney Island a Fun Site City Against Coney Change The New York Times p R1 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 118229383 Chamber Submits Coney Island Plan The New York Times December 4 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Fowle Farnsworth October 5 1966 City Wants Site of Steeplechase For Seafront Coney Island Park Planning Board Sets Oct 19 Hearing to Bar Area for High Rise Homes The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Roberts Steven V October 20 1966 A Park Is Backed For Coney Island Developer Who Bought Site Calls Plan Wasteful The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 a b c d Chambers Marcia June 16 1977 City in a Shift Says Coney I Park Should Become Amusement Area The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 15 2018 Retrieved September 15 2018 a b c d Fowler Glenn June 3 1979 15 Year Dispute Over Lease for Coney Island Steeplechase Continues The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 15 2018 Retrieved September 15 2018 2 New Owners Take Whirl on Steeplechase New York Daily News July 2 1972 p 132 Retrieved April 25 2023 via newspapers com nbsp Clark Alfred E January 6 1968 State Is Urged to Build a Park At Coney Island s Steeplechase The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Bennett Charles G May 23 1968 Park Usage Voted For Steeplechase City to Seek 2 Million Aid to Buy Coney Island Tract The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 a b c Carmody Deirdre August 5 1985 Reborn Steeplechase Park Planned At Coney I The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 a b c Mirabella Alan June 2 1985 A plan to bring back Coney Island New York Daily News p 311 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved February 24 2019 via newspapers com nbsp a b c Chambers Marcia April 17 1977 City Requests a Writ in Steeplechase Case The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 a b Chambers Marcia April 3 1977 New York After 10 Years Finds Plan to Create a Coney Island Park Is Unsuccessful The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved September 15 2018 Lichtenstein Grace January 18 1975 Coney Island Ride Rentals Stir Charges of Corruptim The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Lichtenstein Grace December 21 1974 City Gets the Right to Evict Tenant in Steeplechase Park The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Weiss Murray April 19 1977 Attempt Final Hurdles at Steeplechase Park New York Daily News p 301 Retrieved April 25 2023 via newspapers com nbsp Campbell Colin August 29 1981 Beleaguered Coney Islanders Rally With Sense Of Affection The Talk of Coney Island The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 a b c d DeSena amp Shortell 2012 p 150 Rangel Jesus March 29 1986 Coney I Opening Season With Hope The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 Willen Liz October 20 1986 Brooklyn Neighborhoods Brooklyn Closeup Steeplechase Park Revival is Step Closer to Reality Newsday p 25 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 285478743 a b Rangel Jesus June 5 1987 Broad Redevelopment Is Urged for Coney Island The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 24 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Galante Mary Ann July 1 1989 West Coast Know How East Coast Nostalgia An Orange County company has teamed up with a New York developer to revive Coney Island Los Angeles Times p 1 ISSN 0458 3035 ProQuest 280964162 Rangel Jesus December 5 1986 State Proposes Baseball Stadium For Coney I The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 16 2018 Retrieved September 16 2018 a b Arena Salvatore April 26 1987 The Business of Bringing Baseball Back to Brooklyn New York Daily News pp 1 8 9 via newspapers com nbsp Kennedy Shawn G August 9 1989 Real Estate Coney Island Development Deal Gaining The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 24 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Martin Douglas November 23 1998 Back to the Drawing Board in Coney Island The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved November 13 2015 Barnes Julian E April 12 2000 Deal Gives Coney Island a Ballpark and a Team That Some Didn t Want The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 25 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Lee Denny September 2 2001 Neighborhood Report Coney Island Seeking to Preserve a Polychrome Dining Fantasy The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Vecsey George June 26 2001 Sports of The Times Summer Rite Returns To Borough of Churches The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 25 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Steeplechase Park Highlights New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b c Durkin Erin November 10 2011 City breaks ground on Coney Island s Steeplechase Plaza New York Daily News Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 31 2018 Ramirez Jeanine November 10 2011 NY1 Exclusive Historic Carousel Is Jewel Of New Coney Island Park NY1 Archived from the original on March 12 2014 Foderaro Lisa W May 24 2013 B amp B Carousell Horses Return Home to Coney Island The New York Times Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 28 2018 Bredderman Will June 1 2013 Nathan s aquarium B amp B Carousell and Brooklyn Nets store open in Coney Brooklyn Daily Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 31 2018 Simon Stephanie May 24 2013 Historic Coney Island Carousel Spins Once Again NY1 Archived from the original on March 12 2014 National Park Service 2016 National Register Information System B amp B Carousell 16000035 PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service p 7 Archived PDF from the original on February 16 2017 Retrieved July 28 2018 Coney Island s B amp B Carousell placed on National Register of Historic Places Brooklyn Daily Eagle March 8 2016 Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 28 2018 Lynch Dennis March 11 2016 B amp B Carousell designated national historic place up for federal preservation money Brooklyn Daily Archived from the original on July 31 2018 Retrieved July 28 2018 Brown Stephen R June 14 2014 Coney Island s new Thunderbolt roller coaster officially opens NY Daily News Archived from the original on June 19 2014 Retrieved June 29 2014 a b Gray Christopher November 15 1987 The Coney Island Parachute Jump For the Boardwalk s Eiffel Tower Restoration or Regulating a Ruin New York Times Retrieved May 5 2006 a b Maniscalco Joe February 15 2010 Coney Island Parachute Jump No climbing allowed New York Post Archived from the original on February 25 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Croghan Lore May 11 2016 Coney Island landmarks present and we hope future Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved February 24 2019 Sources edit Berman J S Museum of the City of New York 2003 Coney Island Portraits of America Barnes and Noble Books ISBN 978 0 7607 3887 0 Archived from the original on July 21 2021 DeSena Judith N Shortell Timothy 2012 The World in Brooklyn Gentrification Immigration and Ethnic Politics in a Global City Lexington Books pp 147 176 ISBN 978 0 7391 6670 3 Archived from the original on May 7 2016 Hoffman L J 2014 Coney Island Postcard History Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4671 2131 6 Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Ierardi E J 2001 Gravesend The Home of Coney Island The making of America Arcadia ISBN 978 0 7385 2361 3 Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Immerso Michael 2002 Coney Island the people s playground illustrated ed Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 3138 0 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Reiss Marcia 2014 Lost Brooklyn Rizzoli ISBN 978 1 909815 66 7 Archived from the original on April 24 2023 Silverman S M 2019 The Amusement Park 900 Years of Thrills and Spills and the Dreamers and Schemers Who Built Them Running Press ISBN 978 0 316 41647 4 Archived from the original on July 21 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Steeplechase Park Oral histories about Steeplechase Park collected by the Coney Island History Project NYC Parks website Steeplechase Park at amusement parks com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steeplechase Park amp oldid 1217893878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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