New York to the North Pole

Public wiki for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition
Revision as of 05:38, 10 November 2022 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|New York to the North Pole}} {{Infobox prepared food | name = New York to the North Pole | image = New York to the North Pole.jpg | image_size = 300px | caption = New York to the North Pole | alternate_name = | country = | creator = | course = | cost = $70,000 ({{Inflation|US|800000|1904|fmt=eq}}) | admission = .25 ({{Inflation|US|.25|1904|fmt=eq}}) | profit...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
New York to the North Pole
New York to the North Pole
Construction Cost$70,000 (equivalent to $24,127,407 in 2021)
Admission.25 (equivalent to $8 in 2021)
Profit$173,403.58 (equivalent to $5,229,724 in 2021)

Near the Ferris Wheel on The Trail, a castle-like attraction offered visitors the chance to visit the north pole.

Etymology

Before the Fair

Description

A 200 x 50 foot full-sized replica of the ocean liner "Discoverer," in water was the starting point for the proceedings. Visitors would board the Atlantic liner and observe the daily life of an arctic adventurer. Inside, mechanisms and moving artwork outside the portholes gave the illusion that the vessel was at sea. Storms brought forth lifeboats and the visitors were evacuated until it was `deemed safe,’ to return the boat, where the entertainment continued. The showstopper was Senor Cameroni hanging from his teeth 150 feet high, until he swung down 2,142 feet to the ground.

The final leg of their journey was in a large auditorium that gave the illusion that they were still on the boat, moving through ice flows. A realistic Aurora Borealis was shown in the sky.

After a 20 minute voyage, visitors arrived at the North Pole, which was shown to look like a Jules Verne-like Hyperborean world of tropical climate surrounded by the cold world of ice. 500 visitors at a time could partake of this attraction.

After the Fair

See also

Notes

References

External links