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Niagara Amusement Park & Splash World

Amusement Park in Grand Island, New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Niagara Amusement Park & Splash World
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Niagara Amusement Park & Splash World[1] (formerly Fantasy Island, Two Flags Over Niagara Fun Park, and Martin's Fantasy Island) is an 85 acres (34 ha) amusement park in Grand Island, New York near Niagara Falls. It features an amusement park and a water park. The park is owned by Store Capital and operated by IB Parks & Entertainment.[2]

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History

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Fantasy Island, Inc. (1961–1981)

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Indian Village

Fantasy Island was founded by real estate developer Lawrence Grant, and opened on July 1, 1961. It was planned by co-financier and local jeweler Gerald Birzon, with buildings designed by Milton Milstein & Associates.[3] The ownership group was formed under the name Fantasy Land, Inc. before changing soon after to Fantasy Island, Inc. The group had originally planned to call the park Fantasy Land, but changed the name for legal reasons after discovering there was an area of Disneyland called Fantasyland.[4]

Upon opening, the park occupied only 12 acres (0.049 km2) of land that was divided into five themed areas: Action Town, Animal Kingdom, Garden of Fables, Indian Village and Western Town.[5] Action Town featured amusement rides, Animal Kingdom featured a petting zoo, Garden of Fables featured explorable recreations of fairy tale scenes, Indian Village featured Native American dancers, and Western Town featured a live Wild West show.[6]

To promote the park, WGRz aired a live weekly television program on Saturday mornings from 1961 to 1962 titled Fantasy Island Show, featuring the park's characters and puppeteers performing for an all-children live studio audience. The show's host and protagonist was Buckskin Joe, portrayed by park general manager Clyde "Buddy" Farnan.[7][8]

A 2,500-seat outdoor arena was constructed in 1965 for French lion tamer Jean "Tarzan" Zerbini's circus.[9] Actor Jim Carrey grew up in nearby Ontario and would vacation at Fantasy Island, citing Zerbini's show as a fond memory.[10]

The park was expanded to 85 acres (0.34 km2) in 1974 to make room for more thrilling rides and to broaden the park's appeal.[11]

Citing the 1979 oil crisis and rising cost of gasoline, the park reported a 62% drop in profits during the 1979 season.[12] The park was put up for sale that same year.[13]

After dwindling attendance stemming from Western New York's Rust Belt economic decline, Fantasy Island, Inc. declared bankruptcy and the park did not operate for the 1982 season.[citation needed]

Charles R. Wood Enterprises (1982–1989)

The park was acquired out of bankruptcy in November 1982 by Charles R. Wood Enterprises, headed by Charles Wood, founder of Six Flags Great Escape and Hurricane Harbor in Queensbury, New York.[14]

A water park called Water World was added in 1984. Wood also installed an 800-seat picnic pavilion that was previously used at the 1982 World's Fair.

Arto Monaco was commissioned to redesign Garden of Fables, constructing a castle with a moat that was encircled by a horse-drawn carriage he had previously built for Land of Makebelieve.[15]

International Broadcasting Corporation (1989–1992)

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Allan Herschell Company Iron Horse

Wood sold the park to International Broadcasting Corporation (IBC) in April 1989 for $36 million.[16] As part of the deal, Wood would remain the chief executive officer of the park, and his son-in-law, Tom Wages, was retained as general manager.[17]

Following the 1989 closure of nearby Crystal Beach Park, that park's famed The Comet roller coaster was purchased by Charles Wood at auction in October 1989 for $210,000, disassembled, and stored indefinitely at Fantasy Island.[18]

In June 1990, Michael Murach was paralyzed from the head down while performing a high diving act at the park when he slipped on a diving board during a comedy act and fell 20 feet (6 m), hitting his head on the edge of the concrete pool. Years later, Murach was awarded damages of $58.6 million after a jury found International Broadcasting Corporation 100% liable for his injury. The end of the diving board was not installed at a proper distance away from the edge of the pool to prevent such an incident from occurring.[19]

In August 1991, 14-year-old Kenneth Margerum fell 60 feet (18 m) to his death from the park's Ferris wheel after his seat dropped from its axle. It was revealed that the park operators routinely removed one or two seats from the ride each day to prevent the ride from moving around in high winds during off-hours. Each time the ride opened, the seats were bolted back onto the frame of the ride. Investigators found that only one side of the victim's seat had been bolted properly, causing Margerum's seat to drop from its axle, subsequently leading to his death.[20]

Charles R. Wood Enterprises (1992–1994)

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Martin's Fantasy Island

Charles Wood reacquired the park in October 1992 for $14 million when International Broadcasting Corporation went bankrupt. In his second stint of ownership, Wood changed the park's name to Two Flags Over Niagara Fun Park.

Martin's Shows (1994–2016)

Martin DiPietro, owner of Martin's Shows, purchased the park and renamed it Martin's Fantasy Island in January 1994.[21] Charles Wood took the stored The Comet roller coaster and reassembled it at Six Flags Great Escape and Hurricane Harbor later that year.[22] DiPietro would install his own roller coaster named Silver Comet in 1999, inspired by the original.[23]

Store Capital (2016–2021)

Apex Parks Group

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Silver Comet station

Martin DiPietro sold the park's land to Store Capital in May 2016, and Apex Parks Group began leasing the property from Store Capital that same month.[24][25] The park returned to its original name of Fantasy Island.

Reports surfaced in 2018 and 2019 that the general condition of the park had deteriorated, with many attractions not operational due to mechanical failure and understaffing.[26][27]

On February 19, 2020, following reports that Apex Parks Group had put the park's rides up for sale, the company confirmed that the park had permanently closed.[28][29] A settlement was reached with the Attorney General's office to refund customers that had purchased 2020 season passes.[30]

IB Parks & Entertainment (2021–present)

Gene Staples, owner of IB Parks & Entertainment, entered a long-term agreement to lease the property from Store Capital in May 2021. Staples also owns and operates Clementon Park and Splash World and Indiana Beach. The park was renamed Niagara Amusement Park & Splash World, and reopened in August 2021.[31] The 2021 season featured only the water park, as rides were refurbished and reinstalled in the dry park.[32] The full park reopened for the 2022 season.[33]

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Rides and attractions

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Roller coasters

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Flat rides

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Water park attractions

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Unopened attractions

Niagara Amusement Park & Splash World owns a large collection of attractions that are in varying states of construction or storage. Listed below are rides that have not been opened to the public since the park reopened. The reopening timeline for all rides listed is vague and unclear. The Comet, a kiddie coaster named Miner Mike, and a drop tower named Strike-U-Up were briefly in storage at the park as well, but have since been removed and were never constructed.

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Former rides and attractions

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Many of the park's rides were sold by Apex Parks Group following the closure of the park in 2019.

Former roller coasters

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Former flat rides

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Former water park attractions

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References

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