Remembering Ohio's Geauga Lake, once the world's largest theme park. Look back at photos
From its earliest days in the late 19th century, when Geauga Lake was just a train stop with picnic tables and boats to rent, the park grew. Its first ride was a steam-powered carousel, added in 1889. Its first roller coaster didn't come until 1925 with the Big Dipper, which entertained thrill-seekers until the park closed down.
And in 2001, Geauga Lake absorbed the neighboring Sea World, when the latter closed its Ohio park. That made Geauga Lake the largest theme park in the world by area at the time, covering some 700 acres on both sides of the lake.
Less than a decade later, the fun was over.
In 2007, the park shut down after rounds of ownership changes and park expansion. Now, what's left of Geauga Lake Park may return to its 19th-century roots. The City of Aurora has purchased the former Geauga Lake and Sea World land, with the intent of making it a public park.
Here's a look back at the history of Geauga Lake, as reported in previous Beacon Journal articles.
Looking back at Geauga Lake Park in Ohio; its first roller coaster, the Big Dipper, debuted in 1925
Here's a brief history of Geauga Lake:
1887: The northeast side of Geauga Lake is first called Picnic Lake or Giles Pond, a place where visitors camped, went fishing or picnicked.
1889: The park's first ride is added, a steam-powered carousel.
1925: Geauga Lake's first roller coaster is built. The Big Dipper was the largest wooden roller coaster built at the time, at 2,800 feet long and a height of 65 feet.
1939: A dance hall and ballroom are built.
1969: Funtime Inc. purchases the park.
1977: The Double Loop — Ohio's first looping steel coaster — opens.
1978: The Corkscrew steel coaster debuts.
1984: The Wave, the first pool of its kind that creates 6-foot waves, opens.
1988: The park celebrates its 100th year and welcomes the Raging Wolf Bobs wooden roller coaster.
1995: Geauga Lake is purchased by Premier Parks Inc.
1998: Premier Parks purchases Six Flags Theme Parks.
2000: Park changes name to Six Flags Ohio.
2001: Six Flags purchases SeaWorld Cleveland, renamed to Six Flags Worlds of Adventure.
2004: Six Flags sells the park to Cedar Fair, at the time the owner of Cedar Point. The name is changed back to Geauga Lake.
2005: Cedar Fair revamps the old Sea World into a water park called Wildwater Kingdom.
2007: The ride side of Geauga Lake closes.
2016: Wildwater Kingdom closes.
SOURCES: Aurora Historical Society and Akron Beacon Journal archives.
This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Remembering Ohio's Geauga Lake with photos from its century of history
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