Rocky Point Amusement Park

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Rocky Point Arch Flyaround - September 19, 2015 - YouTube
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Rocky Point Park was an amusement park on the Narragansett Bay side of Warwick, Rhode Island. It operated from the late 1840s until it closed in 1995. The following year, the park filed for bankruptcy.


Rocky Point Amusement Park - Wikipedia
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History

Rocky Point Park was first conceived by Captain William Winslow in the 1840s. By 1847, he had purchased a part of the land and began to offer amusements and serve dinner.

On Sunday, September 6, 1903, blue laws prevented the National League's Boston Beaneaters from playing the Philadelphia Phillies at their usual home park, South End Grounds in Boston. The game was moved to a field at Rocky Point, where the ocean apparently came right up to the edge of the outfield. (Boston won, 3-2.)

From the 1950s through the mid-1990s, Rocky Point Park was one of the most popular attractions in Rhode Island. It featured rides such as the Skyliner, Corkscrew Loop Roller Coaster, Log Flume, and the Freefall (similar to the identically named ride at Six Flags parks), which fell 13 stories at 55 mph (89 km/h). It also featured the Shore Dinner Hall, famous for its clamcakes, steamers, lobsters, and New England Clam Chowder, which seated over 4,000 patrons at a time. In later years, Rocky Point's locally-famous logo of a lobster tipping his hat was used in much of the park's advertising both in TV commercials and in print.

The park was the inspiration for the title of Rocky Point Holiday, a composition for wind band by Ron Nelson.


Rocky Point Amusement Park Video



Final years

In the early 1990s, Rocky Point's financial situation became shaky. The privately held company that owned the park began to lose money as it attempted to keep the park up to date. Critics accused the company's shareholders of trying to wring every last penny out of the park. Rocky Point closed in 1995, then reopened briefly in 1996 as a farewell to patrons. Rides such as the Flume and Corkscrew were sold in an auction and are now in use at other amusement parks.

Records filed with the Federal Bankruptcy Court in Worcester, Massachusetts:

  • For a number of years Rocky Point was making large loans to unrelated companies that were also owned by the RP shareholders. Those companies were put into Chapter 11 and Rocky Point could not collect repayment.
  • Finally in 1991 Rocky Point was severely over-leveraged, again, to loan $6 million to other unrelated companies owned by the RP shareholders. Those companies were then put into Chapter 11 so Rocky Point could not collect on those loans either.
  • Staggering under this heavy debt load, which was not its own debts, Rocky Point simply could not pay its own bills to survive.

These facts were published by The Providence Journal and the Warwick Beacon during the bankruptcy periods of 1995-1997.


Rocky Point, RI • Ca. 1910 Herschell-Spillman - CarouselHistory ...
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Post-business era, vandalism

After the Rocky Point land was purchased for $8.5 million in 2003, the park's main building, known as the "Big House", was hit by vandals who lit it on fire on September 2, 2004. Police said the fire was suspicious, because the building had no electricity at the time.

Another fire started on October 16, 2006 around 11 a.m., this time in an executive building on the waterfront. Smoke could be seen billowing up more than 2,000 feet (610 m) in the air from miles away. Police reported no injuries in either fire. It is unclear if this fire was caused by arson.

On May 7, 2007, demolition of the remaining midway officially began with a press conference at the park. Prior to this, a handful of stands and minor buildings had already been demolished.

On September 7, 2007, a documentary film about the park, You Must Be This Tall: The Story of Rocky Point Park, had its world premiere at the Stadium Theatre in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. The film garnered a five-star review from The Providence Journal and played to a sold out crowd of 1,100 people.

In February 2008, the city of Warwick secured a federal grant to purchase about half of the 82 acres (33 ha) remaining Rocky Point Park, including much of the view of the bay. The city officially took title to 41 acres (170,000 m2) shoreline of the former park in August 2008.

On November 2, 2010, a ballot proposal passed to issue state funding to "acquire the title to land in and around what used to be Rocky Point Park to establish the land as a public park."

On September 17, 2012, the Small Business Administration accepted the state's offer to purchase the Rocky Point property to be developed into a State Park.

On March 28, 2013, the sale of the remaining 82 acres of the former amusement park was conveyed to the state of Rhode Island. The RI Department of Environmental Management (DEM) will oversee the operation and maintenance of the entire property.


Rocky Point Like You Never Wanted To See It - YouTube
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Re-opening

On June 26, 2011 Rocky Point was once again opened to the public and features a new asphalt mile long walking path along the shore of Narragansett Bay. The Shore Dinner Hall was later demolished, rest of the amusement area cleared, and opened to the public. The majority of the amusement park space is now an empty field for the passive use park. A few elements of the park remain, including the upper and lower stations for the Skyliner gondola ride, ruins of an old water tank, and a large arch by the entrance that was originally built for the 1964 World's Fair in Flushing, Queens, and subsequently moved to Rocky Point.

As of November 2014 the State of Rhode Island is coordinating the development of Rocky Point State Park with the City of Warwick. Use by the public is being managed by the DEM Parks and Recreation office.

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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