Showing posts with label PeopleMover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PeopleMover. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

My 1967 Disneyland Nostalgia Trip

1967 Disneyland Hotel logo

Rummaging through some old Disneyland memorabilia, I came across this July/August 1967 issue of Disneyland Hotel Check-In. Needless to say, it conjured up all sorts of memories of summer vacations spent with my family at Disneyland.

Check-In was a free magazine given to hotel guests that spotlighted events and attractions in the Anaheim area.


This particular issue celebrated the grand opening of the Anaheim Convention Center. On the cover were Goofy, Mickey, Pluto and "Miss Disneyland" Marcia Miner, Disneyland's 1967 ambassador.

The Anaheim Convention Center opened on July 12 with a gala performance by the Orange County Symphony Orchestra under the direction of special guest conductor Arthur Fiedler. Three days later, '60s rock icon Jefferson Airplane shared the stage with Jim Morrison and The Doors. The inaugural meeting event at the Convention Center was the Home and Decorators Show.

In this aerial photo from the magazine, you can see the nearly completed Convention Center (bottom left) with its 9,100 seat dome-shaped arena. Top left is the Disneyland Hotel with its single Tower Building. Look carefully behind the tower and you can see the 9-hole executive golf course (sized down from 18 holes) that was once part of the resort. On the right is Disneyland and its massive parking lot.


Compare the photo to this modern day shot from Google Earth. The area's filled in a bit over the last 44 years, and not just with Disney California Adventure.


When the Anaheim Convention Center opened, it had 375,000 square feet of meeting and exhibit space. After three major renovations, today the exhibit hall space alone exceeds 800,000 square feet. 

Since 1967, the Disneyland Hotel has added two more towers, which have recently undergone major remodels themed to Adventureland, Frontierland and Fantasyland (the Fantasy Tower will be completed in 2012). 

The original front of the Disneyland Hotel was torn out in the late 1990s to make way for Downtown Disney. Here's a question for Disneyland Hotel veterans: Remember when you always took the Monorail or the tram to get from the hotel to Disneyland because walking was just way too far? Now it seems like nothing to stroll the length of Downtown Disney. I guess that's what happens when you have something other than pavement to look at. Of course, the absence of a hotel tram kind of limits your options.

The Future Isn't What it Used to Be

Disneyland Hotel Check-In also featured an article on the new Tomorrowland, the $23 million makeover of the land of the future that introduced the classic PeopleMover, Carousel of Progress and Adventure Thru Inner Space attractions.

Pluto hitches a ride on the PeopleMover
while the Rocket Jets soar overhead.
Check-In called Tomorrowland "a world on the move--entertaining space-age exploration and scientific adventures aboard a whole network of totally new transportation systems."

Disneyland's Carousel of Progress, transplanted from
the 1964 New York World's Fair.
This Tomorrowland of my childhood was bright, wondrous and constantly on the move. Today's Tomorrowland of Space Mountain, Star Tours and Buzz Lightyear's Astro Blasters, though entertaining, just doesn't have the same energetic feel. Maybe it's just childhood bias. As we get older, the good times of our youth always seem that much better.

Tomorrowland Today
Or maybe Tomorrowland 1967 really was better. My dad shot this 8mm home movie of Disneyland that year. The Tomorrowland footage, complete with the Skyway, PeopleMover, Submarine Lagoon and Autopia, starts at 4:03.


Yep, 1967 was a very good year.

As I dig through this old box of childhood memories, I've got a lot more Disneyland items to share--and some Walt Disney World stuff as well. Stay tuned...



Sunday, October 2, 2011

Walt Disney World 1977: A Nostalgic Look Back

1977 Walt Disney World guide
“I love the nostalgic myself. I hope we never lose some of the things of the past.” – Walt Disney

With Walt Disney World celebrating its 40th birthday yesterday, I decided to rummage through some old Disney photos. I came across these pics from June 1977 when I took my first trip to Walt Disney World with my family. I had just turned 15 and received a Kodak Instamatic camera for my birthday (forget Instagram all you iPhone users, I had the real thing). For serious photographers, it was a toy camera, but to me it was the most awesome gadget ever. The camera took 126 film cartridges and required an 8-bulb Flip Flash if you were shooting at night or indoors (if you don't know what I'm talking about, Google is your friend). It even had alphabet stickers so I could put my initials on the back. How cool was that?

I'm sure I still have that old Instamatic stored away in a box somewhere. I loved that thing and used it for many years. As you'll see below, it took some fairly decent pictures.

I made the trip to Walt Disney World with my mom and my sister. My dad had died suddenly in 1976 and this would be the last family vacation the three of us would take before my sister went away to college. By the end of the summer, my mom and I would move to Orlando, where I graduated from high school in 1980.

During those three years in Florida, mom and I made a lot of trips to Walt Disney World. This first one will always be my favorite.

Once upon a time, there was only one theme park inside Walt Disney World.
Welcome to the Magic Kingdom.

One of the few shots of Cinderella Castle I took during the trip. Film
cost money (remember film? HA!) and exposures were limited.
We're spoiled by digital cameras these days--and, boy, do I appreciate it.

A rare picture of my mom (and me) on Cinderella's Golden Carrousel.
To say she hated to have her picture taken was a huge understatement.
Try loathed, despised. I did not inherit that trait from her.

Gone, but not forgotten:  the Nautilus cruises 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
Fantasyland's great E-ticket ride.

My buddy Tigger and I in front of the entrance to Adventureland.

Once upon a time, the entrance to Tomorrowland was an inviting blue and
white with cascading water.

"Presented by America's Investor-Owned Electric Companies": the WEDway
PeopleMover...with the StarJets circling above.

"Row five, green light to go!" Long before it was the Tomorrowland Speedway, it
was the Grand Prix Raceway.

A view of the Grand Prix Raceway from the Walt Disney World Railroad
with the Skyway in the background (sigh).

From the Monorail, a slightly blurry Space Mountain.

The Contemporary Resort Hotel, still my favorite hotel at Walt Disney World.
The Monorail goes right through the middle of it, hello!

The Polynesian Village Resort Hotel. On the left, you can see the Oahu
Longhouse under construction. It was later renamed "Tokelau."

My sister and I about to take a cruise on the Seven Seas Lagoon in a mini speedboat.

Pioneer Hall, perpetual home to the Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue.

Forget Typhoon Lagoon. Forget Blizzard Beach. The best water park ever at
Walt Disney World was River Country on the shores of Bay Lake.

Slippery Slide Falls at River Country. That's me on the left about to take the plunge.


Before branding and commercialism took over, the Downtown Disney
Marketplace was simply known as the Village at Lake Buena Vista,
full of quaint shops and restaurants. Fulton's Crab House used to be
the uber-classy Empress Lilly (named for Walt Disney's wife Lillian),
home of three restaurants: the Steerman's Quarters, the Fisherman's Deck
and the Empress Room. The Baton Rouge Lounge served up some
mighty fine cocktails too.

Happy 40th Birthday Walt Disney World!

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