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Great amusement park and coaster! Once my girlfriend and I (age 16?) ran out of money on rides and those great milk shakes! Consequently, had no money for bus fare back to Port Authority or subway fare. We hiked to the George Washington Bridge and asked a policeman for subway carfare, walked across the bridge to Manhattan, then took the subway and el back to Woodhaven, Queens. Ah, youth! LOL!

Last edited by Tinplate Art

My parents took me there many times. We would take the subway to 168th Street, and take the Public Service buses from their open air lot (before the GWB bus terminal had opened) across the bridge. As a city boy who could see the magical lights and roller coaster from across the Hudson in Riverside Park, going to Palisades was traveling to another world, full of trees and shady roads and private homes, so different from the Upper West Side. My favorite ride was the Wild Mouse.

Last edited by West Side Joe

On Tuesday evenings in the summer in the 1960's, we would walk over a couple of blocks to Riverside Drive Park and pick a spot with a clear view of the river to watch the weekly free fireworks show on the Hudson River. The twinkling lights of Palisades Amusement Park shone on the opposite shore. Radios would be playing music, people would be playing bongo drums and other instruments, there would be people on blankets or on lawn chairs, all waiting for the show to start.

Sadly, the fireworks show stopped forever when one evening (we were there) a stray firework fell onto the barge in the middle of the river and ignited the barge's entire stock of fireworks. It was a spectacular display, but I think there were some casualties, and the show never returned.

Last edited by West Side Joe

And then there was Coney Island - end of three BMT and one IND subway lines.  Has anyone else ridden on the horses at Steeplechase Park.  My parents took movies of themselves on the parachute ride around 1940.

To get there, you could ride the McDonald Avenue trolley line under the el and sharing tracks with the South Brooklyn railroad.

I rode the Steeplechase Park roller coaster horses once in the 1950's with my father.  I was too small to ride by myself so I was placed on my father's horse together with him. In retrospect, that was incredibly dangerous to do, but safety precautions were pretty much non-existent back then.

At the end of the ride, a clown stood by with a paddle ready to whack the riders on their rear ends as they got off the horses.

After that, there were lots of rides to go on inside the huge ancient glass and iron Steeplechase Park pavilion.

My dad liked going to Coney Island, as well. I think he liked Coney Island for the hotdogs and beer, and Palisades (which was closer to Hoboken, where we lived), for the French fries in those conical cups and beer! I definitely loved the salt water wave pool. Oh, and tossing ping-pong balls into little fish bowls to win a goldfish.

I rode the Steeplechase Park roller coaster horses once in the 1950's with my father.  I was too small to ride by myself so I was placed on my father's horse together with him. In retrospect, that was incredibly dangerous to do, but safety precautions were pretty much non-existent back then.

At the end of the ride, a clown stood by with a paddle ready to whack the riders on their rear ends as they got off the horses.

After that, there were lots of rides to go on inside the huge ancient glass and iron Steeplechase Park pavilion.

Remember it well, also road the horse coaster with my father. The big wooden slide inside with the spinning disks at the bottom.

Wow, stuff I haven't heard about in decades. I only remember going to Rye Playland and Coney Island. I think Palisades was gone by the time I was old enough to go on my own and I never made it out to Rockaway.

Living nearby in Scarsdale, I was a frequent flyer on the Dragon Coaster.  In the 40's just after the war, my parents took us to the beach there, and I remember seeing the steamer from New York at the pier.  We went their in high school.  In the 80's we took our kids to Playland and two of the three girls went with me on the Dragon Coaster.  Playland exopects to be open this year and I believe the dragon will still be eating riders.

As long as we are talking river boats (and with the moderators' indulgence), who remembers the Hudson River Day Line Alexander Hamilton side-paddle-wheel steamboat that ran from 42nd Street to 125th Street, then to Bear Mountain and West Point? We took it several times. What a wonderful day on the water. And in the center of the boat, there was an open gallery where you could see the huge piston rods sliding back and forth as they turned the paddle wheel crankshaft.

Alexander_Hamilton

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  • Alexander_Hamilton

As long as we are talking river boats (and with the moderators' indulgence), who remembers the Hudson River Day Line Alexander Hamilton side-paddle-wheel steamboat that ran from 42nd Street to 125th Street, then to Bear Mountain and West Point? We took it several times. What a wonderful day on the water. And in the center of the boat, there was an open gallery where you could see the huge piston rods sliding back and forth as they turned the paddle wheel crankshaft.

Alexander_Hamilton

My mother took us to Bear Mountain on that boat when I was in elementary school.  Unfortunately I was not yet old enough to know about cylinders and pistons and why that funny quadrangle on the top of such boats was going back and forth.

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