
| Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel #6 | |
|---|---|
| U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
| (U.S. National Historic Landmark) | |
|
The carousel at Elitch Gardens, ca. 1904-1920.
|
|
|
|
|
| Location: | Kit Carson County Fairgrounds 815 15th St Burlington, Colorado 80807 |
| Coordinates: | 39°18′35.7804″N 102°16′10.3079″W / 39.309939, -102.269529972 |
| Built/Founded: | 1905 |
| Architect: | Philadelphia Toboggan Company |
| Added to NRHP: | December 19, 1978[1] |
| Designated as NHL: | February 27, 1987[2] |
| NRHP Reference#: | 78000861 |
Elitch Gardens Carousel, also known as Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel #6 or as the Kit Carson County Carousel, is a 1905 Philadelphia Toboggan Company carousel located in Burlington, Colorado.
Contents |
Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel #6 was manufactured in 1905 for Elitch Gardens. It was used at the park every summer until 1928, when the park acquired a new carousel and sold the existing carousel and band organ to Kit Carson County for $1,200, including the cost of delivery by train to Burlington. During the Depression, the carousel spent six years in storage, re-entering use in 1937.[3]
Restoration of the carousel's band organ began in 1976. The Kit Carson County Carousel was designated a National Historic Site in 1978 and a National Historic Landmark in 1987.[2][4] Restoration efforts continued in 1987 with work to restore the original paint to the animals, chariots, and the outer rim, new siding applied to the carousel building and Victorian-inspired landscaping. A second restoration to the carousel animals took place in 1992. Grants financed research into and restoration of the carousel's original lighting, machinery room, moldings on the paintings, and the Wurlitzer band organ in 1997.
In May 1981, thieves removed three small horses and a donkey from the carousel during a heavy rainstorm. The animals were later recovered from a Salina, Kansas warehouse and returned to the carousel following a parade through Burlington in October 1981. Commemorative markers on the carousel mark the recovered animals' locations. [5]
The carousel pictured is not a Philadelphia Toboggan Company machine. It is from the factory of Karl (Carl) Muller in Mobiltz, Germany.[citation needed]
It is the only antique carousel in America retaining its original paint on both the scenery panels and the animals, and it is the only surviving menagerie (having other animals in addition to horses) carousel made by Philadelphia Toboggan Company.[6]
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||
Why are we here?
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
This page is cache of Wikipedia. History