Glen Echo Park Band Organ Is Back Home Again
By Mark Kinsler
[ Ref. 20.10.02 MMD ]
Just beautiful work, and thanks. Question: Why is the National Park
Service involved here? They've clearly built an excellent building,
but is the carousel in a national park of some sort?
One other question on carousel organs: Cleveland's Euclid Beach
amusement park had one that I heard when I was very small, and I was
fascinated with it. I think I read here that it might have been saved
and is in someone's collection. Does anyone know?
Mark Kinsler
[ To answer Mark's first question, yes, Glen Echo Park is owned by the
[ U.S. National Park Service. When the amusement park closed in 1968,
[ the rides were sold including the carousel. Glen Echo Town council-
[ woman Nancy Long organized a successful fundraising drive to buy
[ back the park's beloved carousel. Local residents mounted a campaign
[ that raised $80,000 in private funds to buy the carousel from an
[ organization that had purchased it after the park closed. The
[ return of the Wurlitzer organ was assured by an additional $10,000.
[ The carousel and organ were then donated to the National Park Service
[ with the understanding that they would remain at Glen Echo Park and
[ be operated for public enjoyment. Glen Echo Park has been a part of
[ the U.S. government's National Park Service since 1971.
[
[ -- Relief Editor
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(Message sent Sat 3 Oct 2020, 20:10:18 GMT, from time zone GMT-0700.) |
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