Pleasure Island (Massachusetts amusement park)


Pleasure Island was an amusement park located in Wakefield, Massachusetts. The park, billed as the "Disneyland of the Northeast", was in business from 1959 to 1969. During its short existence it went through several owners and was financially handicapped by New England's relatively short summers.

History

Pleasure Island was founded by William Hawkes, publisher of Child Life magazine, and designed by Cornelius Vanderbilt Wood, a designer of Disneyland and Lake Havasu City.
Covering, the park featured a plethora of rides and other attractions, including the Space Rocket ride, the Pirate Ride, the Moby-Dick ride, the Wreck of the Hesperus, the Old Chisholm Trail, theme restaurants, a shopping area, an arcade, mini-golf, a carousel, Monkey Island, and many others.
Actors would stage mock gunfights in the Western City or threaten to attack riders on the boat rides. The park's Old Smokey Railroad Line was a narrow gauge railroad using equipment leased from the Edaville Railroad.
Another park feature was the Show Bowl, where performers such as Ricky Nelson, Michael Landon, The Modernaires, the Three Stooges, Clayton Moore, Don Ameche, and Cesar Romero appeared.
Product placement and branding played a part in some attractions, such as the Grist Mill which featured Pepperidge Farm products and the Pepsi-Cola Diamond Lil Theater. Its cartoon character mascot for a time was Popeye.
Today, the land formerly occupied by the park is now Edgewater Office Park. The pond used for the Moby Dick ride is part of the property, with remnants of the ride noticeable on the edge of the pond. The #5 steam locomotive that used to serve at Pleasure Island is still up and running today and can be found at the Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway Museum, located in Alna, Maine. It has been rechristened the #10.

Attractions

Certain scenes from the film Charly were filmed at Pleasure Island.
The ride "Wreck of the Hesperus" followed the theme from the poem The Wreck of the Hesperus written by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.