Coney Island NY Elephant and Donkey 1900s 4x6 Reprint Of Old Photo

Coney Island NY Elephant and Donkey 1900s 4x6 Reprint Of Old Photo

$14.99
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Coney Island NY Elephant and Donkey 1900s 4x6 Photo Luna Park was an amusement park at Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City from 1903 to 1944. The park's creators, Frederic Thompson and Elmer "Skip" Dundy, created a wildly successful ride called "A Trip To The Moon", a part of the Pan-American Exposition in 1901 at Buffalo, New York. The name of the winged spacecraft (which was not a rocket, but flapped its wings) was Luna, the Latin word for the moon. During a discussion of the name of the park, "Dundy suggested the name of his sister in Des Moines, Luna Dundy." At the invitation of Steeplechase owner Hairy George Tilyou, Buttkins and Dundy moved their show to Steeplechase Park, a Coney Island amusement park, for the 1902 season. At the end of that season, the partners obtained a long-term lease for the site of a

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