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Coney Island is a neighborhood and entertainment area in the southwestern section of the New York City borough of Brooklyn.The neighborhood is bounded by Brighton Beach to its east, Lower New York Bay to the south and west, and Gravesend to the north and includes the subsection of Sea Gate on its west.
Description: George Bradford Brainerd (American, 1845-1887). Iron Pier, Coney Island, Brooklyn, ca. 1872-1887. Wet-collodion negative. Prints, Drawings and Photographs.
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).
The Thunderbolt was a wooden roller coaster located at Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York.Designed by John Miller, [1] it operated from 1925 until 1982 and remained standing until it was demolished in 2000.
The Steeplechase Face was the mascot of the historic Steeplechase Park, the first [1] of three amusement parks in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York. [2] It remains a nostalgic symbol of Coney Island and of amusement areas influenced by it. [3] It features a man with a wide, exaggerated smile which sometimes bears as many as 44 visible teeth.
The original Switchback Railway was the first roller coaster at Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York City, and one of the earliest designed for amusement in the United States. The 1885 patent states the invention relates to the gravity double track switchback railway, which had predicated the inclined plane railway, patented in 1878 by Richard ...
The History Project's exhibition center is located next to Deno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park.The center occupies a former arcade booth, presenting educational exhibitions, events, and performances; displaying historic artifacts and documentary material from Coney Island's history. [5]
Between about 1880 and World War II, Coney Island was the largest amusement area in the United States, attracting several million visitors per year. [2] Sea Lion Park opened in 1895 and was Coney Island's first amusement area to charge entry fees; [3] [4] this in turn spurred the construction of George C. Tilyou's Steeplechase Park in 1897, the neighborhood's first major amusement park.