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{{Infobox attraction
{{Infobox attraction
| name          = Arcadia
| name          = Arcadia
| type          = Skill-Based Games
| type          = Arcade<br />Skill-Based Games
| section        = North Midway
| section        = Midway
| built          = 1909
| built          = 1909
| opened        = 1909
| opened        = 1909
| closed        = Unknown
| closed        = 1910 (Replaced)
| replacedby    = [[Wonderland]]
}}
}}


Arcadia was an arcade attraction with skill-based games. It was located at the northern part of the Midway and was replaced with the second [[Old Mill]] ride. This attraction could be the "arcade" that burnt down in the 1911 fire in the same area.
[[Arcadia]] was an arcade attraction with skill-based games. It was located in the northern part of the Midway.<ref>Postcard. 1916. "Olentangy Park midway, postcard." ''Columbus Metropolitan Library: Columbus in Historic Photographs.'' 708O451916. Last modified on Dec. 23, 2021.</ref> This attraction was replaced by [[Wonderland]] by 1911.<ref>Postcard. [https://digital-collections.columbuslibrary.org/digital/collection/postcard/id/41562 "Olentangy Park, Columbus, Ohio."] Accessed through the Columbus Metropolitan Library Digital Collections.</ref> The structure burnt down in the [[Midway Fire of 1911]].<ref>[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/1634174/fire-at-olentangy-park/ "Fire at Olentangy Park."] ''The News-Herald (Hillsboro, Ohio).'' July 27, 1911. Page 1. Accessed through Newspapers.com.</ref><ref>"Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' July 17, 1911. Page 1.</ref><ref>Photographs. 1911. ''The Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' July 17, 1911. Page 1.</ref><ref>"Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." ''The Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' July 17, 1911. Page 1.</ref>
 
Mock Street, located across from the entrance at North High Street and running along the North High Carhouse of the Columbus Railway and Light Company, was renamed Arcadia Avenue in late 1909.<ref>"North High Street Carhouse." [https://www.columbusrailroads.com/ ''Columbus Railroads.'']] Accessed May 23, 2025.</ref>
 
The average trolley park arcade in 1906 had about 15 mutoscopes and 18 phonographs along the walls, with a perfume machine, a stick candy dispenser, a gum dispenser, a scale, a punching bag, a "test your strength" hand gripper and lifter games, a mechanical fortune teller, a postcard machine, an engraving machine, other games around the room.<ref name="wonderland">Wilk, Stephen R. ''Lost Wonderland: The Brief and Brilliant Life of Boston's Million Dollar Amusement Park.'' Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2020. Pages 67-69.</ref> A cashier was generally front and center with view machines and gum dispensers near them. Many featured a piano with snacks and card dispensers nearby. The cashiers were able to provide pennies in change for the machines. A size of the building suggested in 1906 was 40 feet square with free-flowing air.<ref>"[https://archive.org/details/streetrailwayj271906newy/page/470/mode/2up The Construction and Operation of Penny Arcades for Service in Railway Parks]." ''The Street Railway Journal.'' March 24, 1906. Vol. 27. No. 12. Pages 470-471. Accessed through the Internet Archive.</ref>


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
Line 15: Line 20:


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
{{Attractions}}
{{Midway}}
{{Park Sections}}


[[Category:Attractions]]
[[Category:Attractions]]
[[Category:Arcades]]
[[Category:Arcades]]
[[Category:Skill-Based Games]]
[[Category:Skill-Based Games]]
[[Category:Midway]]
[[Category:Added in 1909]]
[[Category:Closed in 1910]]
{{#seo:|description=Arcadia was an arcade attraction with skill-based games at Olentangy Park. It was added to the northern part of the Midway from 1909 to 1910.}}
{{#seo:|keywords=Arcadia, arcade, Olentangy Park, Olentangy Amusement Park, Columbus, Clintonville}}

Latest revision as of 16:26, 3 December 2025

Arcadia
Type Arcade
Skill-Based Games
Park Section Midway
Built 1909
Opened 1909
Closed 1910 (Replaced)
Replaced By Wonderland

Arcadia was an arcade attraction with skill-based games. It was located in the northern part of the Midway.[1] This attraction was replaced by Wonderland by 1911.[2] The structure burnt down in the Midway Fire of 1911.[3][4][5][6]

Mock Street, located across from the entrance at North High Street and running along the North High Carhouse of the Columbus Railway and Light Company, was renamed Arcadia Avenue in late 1909.[7]

The average trolley park arcade in 1906 had about 15 mutoscopes and 18 phonographs along the walls, with a perfume machine, a stick candy dispenser, a gum dispenser, a scale, a punching bag, a "test your strength" hand gripper and lifter games, a mechanical fortune teller, a postcard machine, an engraving machine, other games around the room.[8] A cashier was generally front and center with view machines and gum dispensers near them. Many featured a piano with snacks and card dispensers nearby. The cashiers were able to provide pennies in change for the machines. A size of the building suggested in 1906 was 40 feet square with free-flowing air.[9]

See Also

References

  1. Postcard. 1916. "Olentangy Park midway, postcard." Columbus Metropolitan Library: Columbus in Historic Photographs. 708O451916. Last modified on Dec. 23, 2021.
  2. Postcard. "Olentangy Park, Columbus, Ohio." Accessed through the Columbus Metropolitan Library Digital Collections.
  3. "Fire at Olentangy Park." The News-Herald (Hillsboro, Ohio). July 27, 1911. Page 1. Accessed through Newspapers.com.
  4. "Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." Columbus Evening Dispatch, July 17, 1911. Page 1.
  5. Photographs. 1911. The Columbus Evening Dispatch. July 17, 1911. Page 1.
  6. "Suspect Arson in Destructive Fire at Olentangy Park." The Columbus Evening Dispatch. July 17, 1911. Page 1.
  7. "North High Street Carhouse." Columbus Railroads.] Accessed May 23, 2025.
  8. Wilk, Stephen R. Lost Wonderland: The Brief and Brilliant Life of Boston's Million Dollar Amusement Park. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2020. Pages 67-69.
  9. "The Construction and Operation of Penny Arcades for Service in Railway Parks." The Street Railway Journal. March 24, 1906. Vol. 27. No. 12. Pages 470-471. Accessed through the Internet Archive.