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Canobie Lake Park is an amusement park in Salem, New Hampshire, located about 31 miles (50 km) north of Boston. It was founded as a trolley park on the shore of Canobie Lake in 1902. Three local families currently run the park, which draws visitors from throughout the New England and Mid-Atlantic regions.
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Untamed is Canobie Lake Park's second steel roller coaster, which brought the park's total number of coasters to three [5] at its time of opening. With the closure and removal of Canobie Corkscrew in 2022, [6] Untamed now stands as Canobie Lake Park's only steel roller coaster and their second fully operational full-size roller coaster in the park.
Canobie Lake Park's Caterpillar in motion with its orange-striped green canopy unfurled, covering its riders The Caterpillar ride is a vintage flat ride engineered by the inventor Hyla F. Maynes of North Tonawanda , New York , who dubbed it the Caterpillar when it debuted in Coney Island , New York in 1925.
Canobie Corkscrew was a steel sit-down roller coaster located at Canobie Lake Park amusement park in Salem, New Hampshire. Canobie Corkscrew is one of many Arrow Development Corkscrew models produced between 1975 and 1979.
Canobie Lake is a 375-acre (1.52 km 2) body of water located in Rockingham County in southern New Hampshire, United States, in the towns of Salem and Windham. It is approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long, and on average 0.4 miles (0.64 km) wide, though two arms of the lake combine to produce a width of 1 mile (1.6 km) at the lake's center. [ 1 ]
The coaster operated in Connecticut for only five years before being closed and moved to Canobie Lake Park. It was rechristened the "Greyhound" in 1936 through the 1970s. and then eventually it was renamed the "Yankee Cannonball" in 1983.