07 January 2023

roller coasters: from Russian ice slides to wholesome ent­er­tain­ment in USA

Ice slides at a St Petersburg carnival, 1800.
Credit: Popular Mechanics

Russia and rest of Europe
Russian fun was on giant wooden structures with frozen-over ramps. People slid down on ice blocks and accidents were comm­on­place, yet the popularity remained. Rus­s­ian ice slides were a very simple form of gravity-pow­ered thrills, said Robert Cok­er*, theme park attract­ion designer. Riders boarded sleds made out of hol­lowed-out ice blocks and descended tim­b­er chutes that were packed with snow. They were so popular among the ar­is­tocracy that lit torch­es were installed for night sliding; even Catherine the Great (r1762–96) comm­is­sioned one of her own. Today roller coasters are known as Russian Mount­ains in French, It­al­ian and Span­ish.

By the late C18th, carriages with wheels maintained the thrills in the warmer summer months, and by the early C19th, the idea migrated across Europe. The French devised their own gravity-driven rides with one major improvement; by locking the cars’ wheels into the tracks via carved grooves, the cars wouldn’t derail.

Accounts of Parisian att­ractions showed gravity-powered rides that sent pass­eng­ers in wheeled carts soaring down wooden tracks, insp­ir­ed by Russia. Much fun was el­ic­ited by the Prom­en­ades Aériennes, op­en­ed in Paris in 1817. Built in an amuse­ment park on the Champs Élysées, it had two tracks curving down on either side of a central tow­er, and attached wheeled cars. And see Les Mont­ag­nes Russes à Belleville whose name and concept probably came from Russian Mount­ains via Russian soldiers in Paris post-Wat­erloo (1815)

The Parisian leisure class enjoyed their thrills which sat­ir­ical engravings then dubbed: La Passion du Jour. More rides fol­l­owed, their names evoking lofty land­forms: Fujiyama, Les Montagnes Fran­çaises, Les Montagnes Susses and Les Montag­nes Egypt­ien­nes.

Les Montagnes Russes, ou la Passion du Jour, 
artist unknown.  Musée Carnavalet
Credit: paris musees

USA
In America, the roller coaster had more working-class origins. Penn­sylvania industrialist Josiah White built a cheap, long, 2 parall­el­ed track railway in Lehigh Valley to haul the precious coal in 1827. Using only natural landscape grav­ity, the carts flew down the tracks up to c50 mph, attracting eager tourists. For dec­ades, Penn­sylvania’s Mauch Chunk Switchback Rail­way trans­ported coal each morning and carried tourists each af­ternoon. Mauch Chunk’s popul­ar­ity inspired other att­ractions in the USA in the 1870s-80s.

The term roller coaster may have come from Philo Stevens’ 1884 patent descr­ib­ing a roller coast­ing device built in Chicago. Richard Munch, National Roller Coaster Mus­eum historian in Plain­view Tx, said there were also early coasters in New Orl­eans, Phil­ad­el­phia, St Paul and Tenn­essee. But these early proto-coasters were mostly lost to history - no photos and written acc­ounts only about accidents.

While travelling around selling clothes, garment-maker and Sun­day-school teacher in Ind­iana  LaMarcus Thompson saw some of these coasters in action. Thompson was concerned with sleazy sal­oons and brot­h­els, and lack of wholesome family-friendly ent­er­tain­ment. In 1884 this in­ven­tor designed and built a linear 600’ two-tracked wood­en framed ride with undulating railroad tracks, and side­ways seat­ing similar to Pennsylvania, called Grav­ity Pleasure Swit­chback Railway. One of the most import­ant things about Thomp­son’s railway was its loc­ation: Coney Island NY. It was one of the most pop­ular and suc­cess­fully commercial amusement park in the country in the 1880s.

When competition forced Thompson to create more daring de­s­ig­ns, he debuted the Scenic Railway on the At­lantic City board­walk (1887). Essentially it was a switchback railway but with scenes, which ev­en­t­­ually included decorated walls, constructed fac­ades and groves of trees that resembled Ven­etian Canals, Swiss Alps or Nor­th Pole. At a time when world travel was mostly unreachable, this scenic railway brought the world home.

Unlike the switchback, the Scenic Railway had an on-board brakeman, a continuous cable that pulled the train up the track and a comp­leted circuit so attendants didn’t need to push the carriage onto a se­parate track. Thompson built 12+ scenic railways for parks across the country eg Santa Cruz, Coney Island and Minn­eapolis.

Until 1930, innovations emerged in The Golden Age eg the figure 8 coast­er, under­frict­ion wheels, coasters that jumped and a looping-coaster. The resounding click-clack muffled the murmur of anticip­ation as the train inched up the wooden structure. When the riders reached the ap­ex, the bright blue summer sky swallowed every­th­ing. Then, with a lurch, gravity took over and everybody screamed. This was the legend­ary Giant Dipper roller coaster on Santa Cruz Beach Board­walk, south of San Francisco. It was one of the highest roller coasters still in oper­at­ion.

Coney Island Cyclone
opened 1927,
Credit: CNN

By then, c2,000 wooden roller coasters existed for cheap entert­ain­ment; people needed a diversion, to take them out of their every­day lives. Today there are a few Golden Age coas­t­ers re­maining, incl­uding the Jack Rabbit in New York and the Wild One outside of DC.

But in the early 1930s roller coast­ers were nearly undone by the Great Depression. The economic downtown meant people couldn't afford amusement park prices, atten­dance dr­opped and owners stopped maint­ain­ing their parks. So most of the coasters were dem­ol­ished when the parks closed. Luckily Thund­er­bolt at Coney Island (1925) sur­v­iv­ed the Great Depression and continued for decades.

Then WW2 drained labour and buil­d­ing materials, and with the 50s sub­­urban explos­ion, real estate values skyrocketed, making the land too valuable not to sell. The amusement parks that remained were run-down hangouts for naughty teens and loud drunks. But in the early 1950s, while tak­ing his kids to the car­ousel in Griffith Park in Los Angel­es, Walt Dis­ney dreamed of a place full of wonder and magic that the whole family could enjoy together. In 1955, Dis­­n­ey­land was born in gorgeous orange groves.

And in 1959, when Disney was holidaying with family in Switzerland, he sent a postcard of the Matterhorn to his team, saying build this. The team rethought coaster des­ign, creating a tub­ular steel track sys­tem, and trains that used polyurethane wheels. Steel could be bent in ways that wooden tracks could­n't, so it prov­ided smoother rides. The Matterhorn Bob­sled (1959) became Disney’s hom­age to Thom­p­son’s scenic railway, tak­ing riders from sunny California to snow-capped mount­ains.

Sky Walk in Dolní Morava, Czech Republic,
with a 55-meter-high viewing platform
built in 2021

Robert Cartmell, A History of the Roller Coaster, 1987
Robert Coker, Roller Coast­ers: Thrill Seeker's Guide, 2004.



17 comments:

roentare said...

This is such a great story about roller coaster origin or "Russian Mountains". I enjoy reading this

Train Man said...

In the 50s, dad dedicated Sunday afternoons to us children. In summer, it was always to Luna Park and the Scenic Railway. Great memories.

Fun60 said...

I had never heard of the Russian ice slides before and found the info fascinating. You won't find me on a roller coaster. I'm much too scared.

Hels said...

roentare

even though my family was originally Russian, I had never heard of the story of Rus­s­ian ice slides, let alone Catherine the Great. So it was such an exciting story for me to read about.

Hels said...

Train Man

that is a bit like my family's story. Married professional women often didn't work until the last child went to school, so after dad was demobilised, he had to go back to uni to finish his degree work, get a job, build a house for all the new babies and work twice as hard to earn a decent living. Sunday afternoon was virtually the only time we played with him each week. Dad and the boys truly enjoyed their hours at Luna Park back then.

Hels said...

Fun60

tonight there was an ad on tv that talked about drowning deaths where males accounted for 80%, and of motor bike deaths, where 96% were male. I didn't talk about accidents and deaths in this blog post, but I do know that females seemed more cautious in my early memories.

I probably would have had no trouble going on Rus­s­ian ice slides that were relatively flat and only gravity-pow­ered. But the chance of me going on an electric, tub­ular steel track sys­tem with almost vertical slopes are about the same as you going on one :)

My name is Erika. said...

Those Russian ice slides sound cold on the bottom. But it's interesting how people have always been looking for thrills. We have a small amusement park in my state, and it has an old wooden roller coaster. In some ways it is scarier than some of the newer thrill rides, but still it's fun to think of riding it in a historical sense. Not that I've been to an amusement park for many years because once my daughter left for college, taking a family day out like that changed. Have a wonderful weekend!

Hels said...

Erika

quite right...thrills change according to the places we live in and the stage of life we find ourselves in. Every summer holiday until 1963, my grandmothers took me to one pantomime each, something I was besotted with. Now I am not sure if my own grandchildren would even know what a pantomime was.

But even so, there was always something exciting, challenging and scary about roller coasters. It has pushed people beyond their normal life experiences for a very long time now.

Joe said...

Have a look at this. This Czech structure looks like another daredevil carnival ride, but those with a fear of roller coasters will be pleasantly surprised to know that The Sky Walk allows people to get to the top at their own leisurely pace on foot. The Sky Walk towers 1116 meters above sea level and offers breathtaking 360 degree views of nature below. The wood and steel walkways gently slope upwards and are wide enough to accommodate wheelchairs and strollers. Get back to the ground by taking a 101 meter slide, and the more daring can lie on a net that stretches across the structure’s highest peak.

https://plainmagazine.com/sky-walk-czech-republic-walkable-roller-coaster/

Mandy said...

What a fascinating post! I've recently been on the Scenic Railway at Dreamland, Margate. Built in 1920, it is the oldest rollercoaster in the UK. It is quite a thrilling ride!!

hels said...

Joe
The Sky Walk is the most intelligent roller coaster I have seen, with options ranging from the life-risking to the casual and scenic. I will add a photo to the post, many thanks.

hels said...

Mandy
the coast line of Southern England is the most perfect location for scenic pleasure parks. I am not familiar with Dreamland in Margate, but if we ever moved back to the UK, it would be ON the beach.

Andrew said...

I am surprised to learn roller coasters in a form appeared in the 18th century.

"La Passion du Jour." I am amused.

Melbourne's own Luna Park's Big Dipper was built in 1924, quite late really and demolished in 1989. However the Great Scenic Railway lives on at Luna Park, opening in 1912 and I think still running on the original Canadian Oregon pine tracks. It is the second oldest in the world.

Hels said...

Andrew

Amusement parks may be favourite entertainments here in summer, especially as the weeks coincide with our long holidays, beach activities and Christmas-New Year celebrations. But in the northern hemisphere, I would expect there weren’t a lot of exciting _outdoor_ activities on offer. So we have to imagine the thrill of over-dressed participants, chilly snowy skies, millions of fairy lights and colourful holiday decorations everywhere. “Passion” might be overstating the thrill, however.

Was the Scenic Railway part of your youth at all?

Luiz Gomes said...

Boa noite de segunda-feira. Obrigado pela visita e comentário. Minha querida amiga australiana, sugiro você pesquisar mais um pouco sobre o Santuário do Caraça na Internet.

Flying With Hands said...

What a fantastic story! I had no idea about the Russian ice slides and I'm pretty sure they didn't get a mention in the biography of Catherine the Great I read. So many questions pop up for me about the logistics and operation of it all. Who pulls the ice block back up and how? [serfs being the obvious guess] What about sliding off the side etc etc. And the image from Carnavalet is fabulous! Thrill-seeking seems to have had a long history, for men and women, and not just the domain of the C21st base jumpers et al. I guess the horse riding generations had good natural balance and proprioception so didn't need dozens of slides to master standing up, in all their finery to boot!

Hels said...

Pipistrello

The social highlight of Russians in the late 18th century seemed to be drinking tea from a samovar while listening to a talented pianist in someone's home. But real excitement was something else, especially in the snow that lasted from October-April in a lot of the country. The ice slides were fast, exciting and often very dangerous - just what people wanted!

Good on the women for participating, even if it was a tad more carefully than the men participated.