Idora Park

Coordinates: 37°50′32.62″N 122°15′47.36″W / 37.8423944°N 122.2631556°W / 37.8423944; -122.2631556

This article deals with Idora Park of Oakland, California. For another park of the same name, see Idora Park, Youngstown.

Idora Park was a 17.5-acre (71,000 m2) Victorian era trolley park in north Oakland, California constructed in 1904 on the site of an informal park setting called Ayala Park on the north banks of Temescal Creek. Idora Park was leased by the Ingersoll Pleasure and Amusement Park Company that ran several eastern pleasure parks. What began as a pleasure ground in a rural setting for Sunday picnics evolved over time into the finest amusement park in the part of the San Francisco Bay Area. Popularity of the park declined after the advent of the automobile, and in 1929, Idora Park was razed.

Idora Park, Oakland, 1910

History

The Realty Syndicate constructed the park in 1903[1] on a site of Ayala Park that included an opera house, ranchlands and greenhouses on the north banks of Temescal Creek in North Oakland. Rodney Ingersoll erected the first figure eight "sky railway" on the site in 1903. Idora Park was leased by the Ingersoll Pleasure and Amusement Park Company that ran several eastern pleasure parks and originally the name was to be Kennywood Park (the name of an amusement park in Pennsylvania). It was reported that Mr. Ingersoll named the park after his daughter Idora, but there is some question about the name because of the park with the same name located in Youngstown, Ohio. That park was said to have been named either by a contest winner claiming, "I adore it!" or after a local Indian tribe.

The Realty Syndicate also owned and operated what later became known as the Key System transit company, the Claremont Hotel and the Key Route Inn. Major partners of the company were Frank C. Havens and Francis "Borax" Smith, who earned his fortune in borax mining, subsequently investing it in transit, commercial and housing properties in the East Bay area.

Located on the block bounded by Telegraph Avenue, Shattuck Avenue, 56th and 58th streets in the northern section of Oakland,[1] Idora Park was famous for its opera house. Idora Park was a walled-in park, admission to the park was 10 cents, and it was open 30 or more weeks per year. A man named Bertrand York managed the park from 1911 until its razing in 1929.

In the early 1900s, Idora Park was also the site of public demonstrations with lighter-than-air and heavier-than-air flying machines, including a balloon-launched glider flight by David Wilkie in a glider designed by John J. Montgomery on February 22, 1906. Idora Park also served as the location for the final construction of The California Arrow, a dirigible built by Thomas Baldwin in 1904. On August 3, 1904 the first successful round-trip flight of a dirigible in the United States was made by Baldwin with The California Arrow at Idora Park.[2]

In the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, as many as 2,500 displaced people found shelter in Idora Park; food and relief supplies were provided by the Realty Syndicate, purchased from Capwell's Department Store.[3] After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, comic stars from the Tivoli Theater relocated to Oakland and renamed themselves the Idora Park Comic Opera Company. Shows like The Mikado, The Pirates of Penzance and The Wizard of the Nile were performed under the direction of Paul Steindorff in a wooden opera house called the Wigwam Theater. In 1919 when Oakland's own 159th Regiment returned from France, the park was opened to the fighting men at no charge.

Rides

Idora Park rides cost 5 cents. Many of the rides were advertised as being the "largest" or the "first."

Rides were renamed regularly, and one finds titles such as Dodge 'em, The Whip, Over the Top, Race through the Clouds, and the Magic Carpet.

Roller coasters

The park featured five traditional roller coasters during its history:

Attractions

Idora Park boasted the first outdoor public address system built by Magnavox, the first radio theater in the West, and a huge searchlight, and like many things at Idora Park, the searchlight was reputed to be the largest in the world. The evening light display used so much power that it outstripped the original capacity, and a new system had to be installed in 1907.[4]

Idora Park was a walled-in park that had a zoo, ostrich farm, animal shows, dance hall, racetrack, outdoor amphitheater, Japanese garden, bear grotto, main street called the Glad Way, Penny Arcade, photo gallery, and shooting gallery. In 1904 a ballpark with a 3000-seat double deck grandstand was erected, and after the 1906 earthquake, the Pacific Coast League relocated there. The park had the largest roller skating rink in California, the largest west of Chicago that rented clamp-on skates, a bandstand in its center, a mountain slide that sported a firework volcanic display on Saturday nights, and balloon ascensions where the acrobat team of Frank and Carrie Hamilton would parachute after their act.

One attraction was The Laying Hens where participants threw a ball at a wooden hen sitting on a barnyard fence, and if it were hit it, it fell over and delivered a hard-boiled egg to eat. The park offered electric souvenirs, ping-pong, musical arcade, dancing pavilion, roof garden and grill, lunch counters, open-air concerts, and numerous refreshment booths.

Entertainment

Vaudeville performers used Idora Park stages; famous stars who emerged from Oakland included Hobart Bosworth, Fatty Arbuckle, Mabel Normand, and possibly Lon Chaney. It has been said that Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton improved their skating skills at the Idora Park skating rink described (in 1913) as the largest in the world. Something called the Cabaret de la Mort existed for a time. Jack London's daughter Becky describes trips to Idora Park with her father (link below).

Aimee Semple McPherson held the largest outdoor baptism to date before 10,000 spectators in the swimming tanks after returning from the Far East following the death of her husband Robert James Semple.

Refreshments

Idora Park was famous for its crispy sour milk waffles (a recipe later published in the Oakland Tribune). Food at the park was available; ice cream, popcorn and Coney Island "Red Hots" were a nickel, whiskey a dime, Busch Beer from St. Louis was five cents. The park's restaurant featured full course meals for 75 cents to one dollar, and soda pop came in 12 ounce bottles.

Demise

Idora Park was eclipsed by the rise of the automobile and Neptune Beach, California in Alameda, California. In 1929, Idora Park was razed, and a plan to develop the Central Square, an apartment and business complex, was announced. The depression interrupted these plans, and a variety of small storybook houses and worker housing apartment blocks were constructed on the 17-acre site.

References

  1. 1 2 Bagwell, Beth (1982) Oakland, The Story of a City, Presidio Press, California, page 148, ISBN 0-89141-146-1.
  2. Harwood, Craig S. and Fogel, Gary B. Quest for Flight: John J. Montgomery and the Dawn of Aviation in the West, University of Oklahoma Press 2012.
  3. Bagwell, Beth (2012) Oakland, The Story of a City, Oakland Heritage Alliance, California, page 176, ISBN 978-0-615-62916-2.
  4. Bagwell, Beth (2012). Oakland: the story of a city. Oakland, CA: Oakland Heritage Alliance. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-615-62916-2.

External links

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