The Riverside Press-Enterprise

THESE PARKS HELPED WALT DISNEY IMAGINE

A new Anaheim planning document looks at influences on Disneyland

- By Brady Macdonald bmacdonald@scng.com

Walt Disney spent more than a decade dreaming up Disneyland during his travels to European amusement parks, and sent his Imagineers on a series of road trips to visit popular attraction­s across the United States that influenced the developmen­t of the Anaheim theme park.

A new history of Disneyland details the classic amusement parks that inspired Walt Disney’s 1955 creation.

The document was created as part of the 17,000page environmen­tal impact report released in mid-september by the city of Anaheim for Disney’s expansion initiative known as Disneyland­forward.

The 309-page Historic Resources Technical Report, written by the Historic Resources Group, traces Walt Disney’s interest in creating a theme park back to the late 1930s as part of the constructi­on of a new Disney movie studio in Burbank. World War II put plans on hold for a Disney amusement park.

“His original idea was to have something to show people that visited the Disney Studios,” according to the Disneyland­forward EIR. “In the late 1940s, Disney resumed his planning efforts.”

In late 1952, Walt Disney founded the developmen­t organizati­on WED Enterprise­s to help him create Disneyland. WED — which stood for Walter Elias Disney — eventually evolved into Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng, the secretive creative team that designs Disney theme parks, lands and attraction­s.

Let’s take a closer look at the 10 classic amusement parks and attraction­s that influenced Walt Disney.

Beverly Park

Walt Disney was a frequent visitor of Beverly Park with his daughters in the 1940s.

Disney showed Beverly Park owner David Bradley his plans for Disneyland in

1950 and soon after hired him as a consultant for the fledgling park, according to KCET Channel 28.

Bradley’s wife, Bernice, a story researcher at Disney studios, worked double duty as Beverly Park’s treasurer and box office manager.

“Our park was very tiny. There was a carousel, a little train ride and another little boat ride for children,” Bernice Bradley said, according to Micechat. “Walt was out there almost every day, sitting on the end of the bench watching how children enjoyed the rides.”

In 1953, Walt dispatched his Imagineers to the small, corner amusement park in Beverly Hills “for inspiratio­n and general reconnaiss­ance,” according to the EIR.

Chicago Railroad Fair

Walt Disney visited the Chicago Railroad Fair in 1948 with fellow railroad aficionado and Disney studio animator Ward Kimball.

The fair featured a Frontier Village, Indian Village and New Orleans French Quarter replica — all elements that would eventually show up in Disneyland.

The fair was encircled by a train that transporte­d visitors from attraction to attraction, according to the EIR.

Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village

Walt Disney also visited the Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan, during the summer of 1948 with Kimball.

“Shortly after returning from the trip, Disney sent a memo to his production designers about a little

village green ringed by shops and idealized building types from the heart of the Midwest,” according to the EIR.

Tivoli Gardens

Walt Disney visited Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen during the summer of 1951 with his wife, Lillian, and their good friend and TV personalit­y Art Linkletter.

Walt Disney Archives director Becky Cline told Business Insider that Walt Disney thought Tivoli Gardens were everything an amusement park should be — from the “gaiety of the music” to the “warm courtesy of the employees.”

Knott’s Berry Farm

Walt Disney and Walter Knott were friends who shared a love of trains, dinners together with their wives and the burgeoning theme park industry.

The Orange County Archives documents a visit by Walt Disney to the Knott’s Ghost Town glassblowi­ng shop in 1951, according to Sfgate.

By 1953, Walt Disney was dispatchin­g his Imagineers to Knott’s Berry Farm for inspiratio­n and reconnaiss­ance, according to the Disneyland­forward EIR.

Walt Disney and art director Dick Irvine visited Knott’s Berry Farm to study foot traffic, according to Neal Gabler’s book “Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imaginatio­n.”

“We’d measure the width of the walkways, the traffic flow and study how people moved about,” Irvine recalled in Gabler’s book.

Madurodam

Walt Disney visited Madurodam shortly after the Netherland­s amusement park opened in 1952.

Madurodam’s miniature cities inspired the Storybook Land Canal Boats attraction that opened in 1956 at Disneyland.

Children’s Fairyland

Walt Disney visited Children’s Fairyland in Oakland in the summer of 1954, where he was inspired by the costumed guides, fairy tale sets and live entertainm­ent, according to the Disneyland­forward EIR.

Coney Island

Walt Disney’s Imagineers spent June 1954 traveling the United States to “assess the economics and land-use practices of successful amusement parks,” according to the Disneyland­forward EIR. The field research stops included Coney Island and the adjacent Luna Park in Brooklyn, New York.

Luna Park, which opened on Coney Island in 1903, “structured its attraction­s around historical, cultural or geographic­al themes — making it the first true theme park,” according to the EIR.

The popularity of Coney Island and Luna Park spawned the developmen­t of more than 1,500 amusement parks by 1919, according to the EIR.

Palisades Park

Another stop on the Imagineers’ 1954 crosscount­ry field research trip was Palisades Park in New Jersey, according to the EIR.

The rival to Coney Island was on a cliff top overlookin­g the Hudson River across from the northern end of Manhattan.

Like many American amusement parks, Palisades Park got its start as a trolley park designed to increase evening and weekend ridership.

Long Beach Pike

Walt’s Imagineers also visited the Long Beach Pike in 1954.

Walt Disney visited the Long Beach Pike in 1953 with Hollywood actor John Derek — with the two testing their aim at the shooting arcade and checking out the coin-operated 3-D movie machine, according to photos posted to the Daveland website.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens were among amusement parks Walt Disney visited while planning Disneyland.
COURTESY PHOTO Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens were among amusement parks Walt Disney visited while planning Disneyland.

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