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In the 1944 season, the park reached an agreement to purchase a used carousel built by PTC in 1919. (It still operates in the park today, with music from a 1926 Wurlitzer model #153 Military Band Organ.) The carousel was the last ride Milton Hershey purchased and saw in operation as he died that year.
The carousel features music from a 1926 Wurlitzer style #153 Military Band Organ. Today, the carousel is the oldest ride in the park. Today, the carousel is the oldest ride in the park. It was originally built in 1919 and is called PTC #47.
1898 Antique Carousel, Canobie Lake Park, Salem, New Hampshire, USA 1913 Herschell Spillman Carousel, Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan, USA (Artizan 'C' with replica 153 façade converted to play Wurlitzer rolls) 1914 Bushnell Park Carousel, Bushnell Park, Hartford, Connecticut, USA [9] plays constantly
This location was chosen for the carousel because Milton S. Hershey, who founded the park, wanted to have a miniature railroad operate in the park. The miniature railroad would connect the main entrance of the park (nearest to downtown Hershey and the train station serving the area) with the west end of the park where the carousel was.
Carousel: 1911 Looff/Murphy A carousel that was built in 1898 and moved to Lake Compounce in 1911. One of the oldest operating carousels in the US. A Wurlitzer #153 band organ once provided the carousel's music. However, due to the difficulty of repairing such an organ, the park uses it sparsely.
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