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Carousel and Wurlitzer 153 band organ at Hershey Park 

Adventures with John
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Hersheypark has been home to three different carrousels or merry-go-rounds over the years.
Hershey Park’s first carrousel began operating in 1908. One of Hershey Chocolate’s salesmen, who had seen one while out traveling on business, thought the Park should have one. He also knew where the Park could buy a good secondhand machine. He told Harry Lebkicher who thought it would be a great addition to the Park, but Milton Hershey was unimpressed. “That can wait,” Mr. Hershey said. But shortly after the Park’s 1908 opening day he changed his mind and Hershey Park purchased a small, used merry-go-round and band organ from the Herschell Spillman Company of North Tonawanda, New York. The ride cost fifteen hundred dollars ($1500), while a new merry-go-round would have cost more than two thousand dollars ($2000).
Milton Hershey and Harry Lebkicher had different ideas on where the new merry-go-round should be set up. Lebkicher wanted it near the entrance to the Park to attract as many riders as possible and not in some out of the way place. Mr. Hershey wanted it located on the far side of Spring Creek near the baseball field. Milton Hershey’s location made sense once he announced his plans to add a miniature railway that would transport people from downtown Hershey to the far end of the Park. The Spillman merry-go-round was delivered to the Park in June 1908. Hershey’s general contractor, Jim Putt, and his men quickly built a new pavilion to house it. The merry-go-round was located on the north side of Spring Creek at what was then the far western edge of the Park near the baseball field. It was up and running before the 4th of July. When the ride’s organ played it could be heard more than three blocks away at the Cocoa House, located at the intersection of Chocolate and Cocoa Avenues. Hershey’s final carrousel was purchased in 1944. That year Hershey Park purchased a even larger carrousel, PTC #47, from the Philadelphia Toboggan Company. The Park had not added a ride since the start of World War II. Buying a used carrousel from the Philadelphia Toboggan Company was the only way it could get something “new.”
To make room for the new carrousel, the Dentzel carrousel was dismantled and sold to an amusement park in Ohio. Later Hershey’s Dentzel carrousel was sold to Knott’s Berry Farm in California.
Hershey’s “new” carrousel had been manufactured in 1919. Since it had been built right after World War I, the carrousel was decorated with images of Miss Liberty and American flags on the outer rim. Originally it had been built for the Liberty Heights Park in Baltimore, Maryland. Ten years later, in 1929, it was moved to Enna Jettick Park in Auburn, New York. During the war Jettick Park closed and the Philadelphia Toboggan Company, which owned the carrousel, needed to find a new place to operate it.
Hershey’s new carrousel was impressive. The PTC #47 had an outside row of stationary horses and three inner rows of jumpers (there were a few small stationary horses on the inside beside the chariots) featuring a total of 66 horses. The carved horses were elaborately designed. There were prancing hunters and carnival horses, as well as cavalry, cowboy, rodeo, and circus horses. The carrousel ceiling was also elaborately painted with decorative butterflies, birds, and flowers. The outside rim of the new carrousel was magnificent. While the Dentzel machine had a few small painted panels on its rim, the new one featured a repeated carved panel of two views of Miss Liberty, separated by a decorative mirrored shield. Carved and gilded American eagles were a frequently repeated motif. A dozen folk art paintings covered inside core panels of the carrousel: a Dutch seaside scene, a mother and child at a brook, a cow and its calf in a meadow, the feeding of ducks, a man riding with his ladylove on a white horse, children and dogs on a seesaw, mother and children leaving home for a walk, a Bavarian home and family with rabbits playing about, a Spanish bullfight, and sisters feeding geese. Carrousel music was provided by a Wurlitzer model 153 military band organ. The songs are “We Wish You a Merry Christmas”, “Have a Holly Jolly Christmas”, and “Sleigh Ride “ from Roll 14523 arranged by Rich Olsen.

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26 дек 2023

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Комментарии : 4   
@danickboily8242
@danickboily8242 6 месяцев назад
very nice music organ plz do more videos of it plz
@adventureswithjohn3953
@adventureswithjohn3953 6 месяцев назад
Thanks, and I will Post more videos in the near future
@danickboily8242
@danickboily8242 6 месяцев назад
Thank you
@adventureswithjohn3953
@adventureswithjohn3953 6 месяцев назад
@@danickboily8242 you’re welcome
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