Riverview Park (Chicago)

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Riverview Park
Riverview Park entrance.jpg
Address: 3300 North Western Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Area: 74 acres
Theme: "Chicago's famous Amusement Park"
Slogan: "Laugh Your Troubles Away!"
Builder: Wilhelm A. Schmidt
Opening date: Jul 02, 1904
Closing date: Oct 03, 1967 - age  62
Status: Closed
Address: 3300 North Western Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Rides: Roller rink
Coasters: two
Water Rides: two

Riverview Park was an amusement park in Chicago, Illinois, which operated from 1904 to 1967. It was located on 74 acres (30 hectares) in an area bound on the south by Belmont Avenue, on the east by Western Avenue, on the north by Lane Tech College Prep High School, and on the west by the North Branch of the Chicago River. It was located in the Roscoe Village neighborhood of Chicago's North Center community area .

Founding

Riverview was established in 1904 by William Schmidt, on the grounds of his private skeet shooting range. The Schmidt family owned and operated the park throughout its lifetime.

"Big Bill" Haywood, the Industrial Workers of the World leader, once spoke here to a crowd of almost 80,000 people.

Riverview Park Map

Rides and attractions

Riverview was most known for The Bobs wooden roller coaster. Other popular coasters were The Comet, The Silver Flash, The Fireball and the Jetstream. Aladdin's Castle was a classic fun house with a collapsing stairway, mazes and turning barrel. Shoot the Chutes, Hades, the Rotor, Tilt-a-Whirl, Wild Mouse, the Mill on the Floss (Tunnel of Love), and Flying Turns were just a few of the many classic rides. "The Pair-O-Chutes at Riverview Park'll shake us up all day" is a line from the Beach Boys' song "Amusement Parks U.S.A." from their 1965 album, Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!). There were over 120 rides in the park.

Racism and closing

Riverview closed in 1967. Urban myths endure, describing the park's "seedy" atmosphere in the 1960s, as it coincidentally became more integrated. Contemporaneous articles in black publications, such as the Chicago Defender, described black patrons being subject to both latent and overt racism; the most overt being a longstanding attraction (not owned by Riverview) but by an outside concessionaire renting space from the park. It was unofficially called "Dunk the Nigger", but officially named "African Dip" and then later renamed "Dip", which the NAACP along with newspaper columnist Mike Royko, successfully lobbied to shut down in the 1950s.

According to Victoria Wolcott, author of 2012 book Race, Riots, and Roller Coasters:

“You see this thing a lot, when African Americans begin going in large numbers [to amusement parks], the parks are increasingly associated with danger and criminality...”

Chuck Wlodarczyk, author of "Riverview Gone But Not Forgotten", once performed shows about the park and reported people often approached him afterwards to report hearsay of someone raped in the park restrooms by a black man, however no actual record of these crimes exist. A Chicago Tribune article from late 1967 also blames violence for the park's closure, however Wolcott says there is little evidence of increased violence at the park.

Ultimately, white flight contributed to financial declines at the park, making the land upon which Riverview was built far more valuable than the park itself. The Schmidt family sold to developers and later stated a newspaper's reported estimated sale price of $6.8 million ($154,878,000 in 2023) was too low.

The former grounds are now home to Riverview Plaza shopping center, the Chicago Police Area 3 Detective Division, DePaul College Prep High School, dental equipment manufacturer Hu-Friedy Manufacturing, and Richard Clark Park, part of the Chicago Park District. The south end of Clark Park has a wooded area where many of the Riverview Park foundations are still visible and is currently used as a bicycle dirt jump and pump track park maintained by the Chicago Area Mountain Bikers. A sculpture entitled Riverview by local artist Jerry Peart stands in front of the police station.

Memorabilia

Many items from Riverview, as well as many paintings portraying the park, were on display at Riverview Tavern, located on the corner of West Roscoe Street and Damen Avenue from 2005 to 2018. The Riverview Carousel continues to operate at Six Flags Over Georgia.[10] It was the only ride to be saved.

Bally and Williams tie-ins

The 1972, Bally Manufacturing Corporation pinball machine Fireball was named after the park's Fireball roller coaster. Also, Bally's Aladdin's Castle amusement arcade division was renamed from Carousel Time to honor the closed Riverview Park and the Aladdin's Castle funhouse. Bally's Aladdin's Castle pinball machine was also inspired by the same funhouse at Riverview. The 1979 Williams Electronics' pinball game Flash as well as their 1985 Comet was named after the park's roller coasters with these names. Bally Manufacturing Corporation and Williams Electronics, Inc. had their headquarters and primary manufacturing facilities just west of Riverview Park during the later years of the park's operating life.

References

  • "Riverview Park (historical)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. 15 January 1980. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  • Gale, Neil (January 16, 2017). "Riverview (Amusement) Park, 3300 North Western Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. (1904-1967)". The Digital Research Library of Illinois History Journal. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  • Shaffer, Randi (October 4, 2017). "50 Years Later: A Timeline of Chicago's Riverview Park". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 4, 2017.
  • Kogan, Rick. "Remembering Riverview Park, 50 years later". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  • Rosemont, Franklin (2002) Joe Hill: The IWW & the Making of a Revolutionary Workingclass Culture, Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company
  • Heffernan, Shannon. "Laugh Your Troubles Away". wbez.org. National Public Radio. p. February 19, 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2023.
  • "Chicago Police Reopen 2 Detective Headquarters In Hopes Of Solving More Crimes". Block Club Chicago. 2020-04-30. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
  • "DePaul College Prep acquires new campus". Crain's Chicago Business. 2019-08-01. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
  • "The Reveler To Celebrate Grand Opening In Roscoe Village". North Center-Roscoe Village, IL Patch. 2018-08-24. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  • www.sixflags.com
  • Canfield, Victor (2 July 2015). "Rotors". Pennsylvania State University. Retrieved 7 December 2020.

External links

Arc.jpg https://web.archive.org/web/20200208163310/http://riverviewparkchicago.com/generic8.html


 
Note to readers: This article is part of "Robin's Personal Memories Project"
 
The information on this page is from my personal history and memories
and should NOT be used for any reason other than reading enjoyment

While stationed at Great Lakes Naval Station, I spent a lot of my free and off-duty time at Riverview. The roller rink was a good place to go and meet people, and the parachutes continuously challenged off-duty military personnel. It made us all feel like "Heroes to be".

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