Elitch Gardens was a family-owned seasonal amusement park, theater, and botanic garden in the West Highland neighborhood in northwest Denver, Colorado, United States, at 38th and Tennyson streets. For more than a century Elitch's was one of the most popular entertainment destinations in Colorado. It was nationally known for its luscious gardens, the Elitch Theatre, the Trocadero Ballroom, and the premier wooden roller coaster, Mister Twister. The park moved to downtown Denver in 1994 and later in November 1998 became Six Flags Elitch Gardens (now simply Elitch Gardens once again). The former location has been redeveloped.

Elitch Gardens
Previously known as Elitch's Zoological Gardens
Poster for Elitch's Zoological Gardens (c. 1900)
LocationDenver, Colorado, U.S.
Coordinates39°46′05″N 105°02′48″W / 39.76806°N 105.04667°W / 39.76806; -105.04667
OpenedMay 1, 1890
ClosedOctober 1, 1994
OwnerJohn Elitch and Mary Elitch Long (1890–1916)
John Mulvihill (1916–1930)
Gurtler family (1930–1995)
Elitch Gardens (1995–2014)
SloganNot to See Elitch's is Not to See Denver
Area28 acres (113,000 m²)
Attractions
Total37
Roller coasters5
Water rides2

Early history edit

 
Elitch Zoological Gardens Gate, 1890
 
Elitch Gardens Theatre, 1923.

Elitch's Zoological Gardens opened May 1, 1890, on 16 acres (6.5 ha) of former farmland bought by John Elitch and Mary Elitch. It was the first zoo west of Chicago, and it offered the Denver community a unique cultural experience.

Mary Elitch Long managed the park for 26 years following John's death in 1891. Mary Elitch was the first woman to own and manage a zoo, and "until the opening of the Denver City Park Zoo, Elitch was the only zoological gardens between Chicago and the West Coast."[1] One of the bears was famous for dancing a waltz when the band played.

The Elitch Theatre (1890) became home to the oldest summer stock theater in the country starting in 1893 and continuing to entertain until it closed in 1991. The building was the site of the first films exhibited in Colorado when Edison's Vitascope was show at the theatre on August 14, 1896.[2] Many famous actors and actresses from New York and Hollywood performed on the Elitch Theatre stage. Offering New York wages, the theatre booked big stars for generations. Today the theatre is still standing at the original park site.

The park's first roller coaster, a Toboggan Figure 8, opened in 1904. The park's original carousel, built by Philadelphia Toboggan Company, was added in 1906. The carousel remains in operation today as the Kit Carson County Carousel in Burlington, Colorado.

Mulvihill/Gurtler ownership edit

 
Flowerbed displaying the "Not to See Elitch's is Not to See Denver" slogan, c. 1916-1920.

In 1916, the park was sold to John Mulvihill, with a provision stating the name could never be changed. New attractions appeared, including the fabulous Trocadero Ballroom in 1917, and two Philadelphia Toboggan Company creations: the Wildcat roller coaster — designed by Herbert Paul Schmeck — in 1922 and a new carousel in 1928. This carousel is still operational at Elitch Gardens. It was during this time the park's enduring slogan was first popularized: "Not to See Elitch's is Not to See Denver."

As floral gardens were expanded and greenhouses built, Elitch's became a commercial florist. Mulvihill died in 1930, and the park's ownership transferred to his son-in-law Arnold Gurtler.

In the mid-1930s, the zoo portion of the park was discontinued, with the space being used for more formal gardens (and rides). A giant floral clock was added and the Trocadero Ballroom became a regular stop for touring big bands and home to An Evening at the Troc, a weekly radio broadcast. During this classic period of Big Band Jazz and Swing, the Trocadero Ballroom became a famous summertime night spot as its seemingly endless succession of brilliant stars provided countless hours of live national radio broadcasts in an age before television.[3]

In 1945, management was assumed by Gurtler's sons, Jack and Budd. In 1952, a section of the park called Kiddieland, oriented to small children, was opened. At a time when amusement parks catered almost exclusively to adults, Elitch's Kiddieland was an instant hit attraction with the first of many lucky generations of small fry. For tots, there were two-seat rocket planes, open-wheel race cars, real floating "motorboats", a real small-scale car track with a gas station, all in Kid Scale. The floral business side of the park was quite successful, becoming the largest supplier of carnations in the country in the early 1950s.

Despite substantial community outcry, the Trocadero Ballroom was torn down in 1976, claiming the declining popularity of ballroom dancing, replacing Denver's beloved landmark Old Troc with Skee-Ball and arcade games. The theater, which had switched formats from summer stock to star-centered performances in 1962, closed in 1991.

Mister Twister edit

Mister Twister opened in 1965. It was a 96-foot-tall (29 m) wooden coaster, designed by John Allen of Philadelphia Toboggan Company,[4] and advertisements promoted the fact that it didn't "have a foot of straight track". It was regularly rated as one of the top ten rides in the country until it stopped operating in 1994 when the park was relocated. Twister III: Storm Chaser at the Elitch Gardens Theme & Water Park is modeled after the original. It was named Twister II until being renamed following a 2023 renovation.

Knoebels, in Elysburg, Pennsylvania, considered relocating the original Mister Twister but, due to space constraints, built a new version very closely patterned after the original, which they simply called Twister.

One feature of Mister Twister was that, after ascending the first hill, the rider was within the line of sight of another coaster, Lakeside Amusement Park's crown jewel 'Cyclone'.

Wildcat edit

The Wildcat was the oldest of the coasters in the park having been built in 1926 as "The Skyrocket" and revamped as "The Wildcat" in 1935.[5] It was an out-and-back design by Herbert Schmeck of the Philadelphia Toboggan Company, and like Mister Twister, did not make the move to downtown Denver. It has since been demolished to make room for residential development.

Sidewinder edit

The Sidewinder was Colorado's first looping coaster, and arrived from Magic Springs and Crystal Falls park (where it operated as "the Roaring Tornado") in 1990. It was built by Arrow Dynamics in 1980, and is a launched shuttle loop that speeds into a drop, into a vertical loop, up another hill, and then proceeds to run the course backwards. It made the move to the new park, It is one of three Arrow launched loops made by Arrow to still operate today.

Ride list edit

  • Mister Twister (1964 John C. Allen wooden twister coaster)
  • Sidewinder (1981 Arrow Dynamics launched shuttle loop, debuted 1990)
  • Wildcat (1927 Herbert Schmeck wooden out-and-back coaster)
  • Spitfire (Hrubetz Spitfire, debut unknown but visible in a map dated 1950 [5])
  • Splinter (Arrow Development log flume, debuted 1978)
  • Rainbow (Huss Rainbow, debuted 1985)
  • Troika (Huss Troika (ride), debuted 1977)
  • Paradise (Huss Breakdance, debuted 1987)
  • Holland Express (Reverchon Himalaya, debuted 1967)
  • Casino (Chance Wipeout/Trabant (Ride), debuted 1965)
  • Mine Shaft (Chance Rotor, debuted 1991)
  • Round Up (Hrubetz Round Up, debuted 1963)
  • Thing-A-Ma-Jig (Heintz-Fahtze Twister, debuted 1985)
  • Spider (Eyerly Spider, debuted 1969)
  • Wild Mouse (Schiff wild mouse, debuted 1960)
  • Bumper Cars (Reverchon Dodgems, debuted 1955)
  • Illuminator (Chance Skydiver, debuted in 1992)
  • Carousel (Philadelphia Toboggan Company 1905 model) first one, Elitch Gardens Carousel, Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel #6, was sold and removed in 1928
  • Carousel (Philadelphia Toboggan Company 1920 model) second one, Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel #51, replaced the original in 1928
  • Big Wheel (Chance Giant Wheel, debuted 1992)
  • Sea Dragon (Chance Sea Dragon, debuted 1981)
  • Sky Ride (Hopkins chairlift, debuted 1969)
  • Battle Zone (boat tag, debuted 1987)
  • Tilt-A-Whirl (Sellner Tilt-A-Whirl, debuted 1957)

Move to new location edit

In 1985, management and ownership of the park was assumed by Buddy Gurtler's son, Sandy Gurtler. At its historic location the park had no expansion space, and the family had long planned to relocate to a larger location. The city of Denver provided a location in the Central Platte River Valley, an area that was once a Superfund cleanup site.

On May 27, 1995, Elitch's opened at its new downtown location with fifteen of its twenty major rides from the old location.[6] The new location sits adjacent to Interstate 25 between Empower Field at Mile High and the Pepsi Center. It is currently one of the few downtown amusement parks in the United States.

At the old location, separate arson events a day apart in November 1995 destroyed the arcade building[7] and heavily damaged the Splinter water ride and Wildcat roller coaster.[8]

Following two seasons at its new location with attendance of about one million (versus 750,000 for the last season at its old location) and a second season goal of 1.2 million,[9] the park was sold to Premier Parks who subsequently purchased all Six Flags parks. The park operated as 'Six Flags Elitch Gardens' until 2006. CNL Lifestyle Properties purchased Elitch Gardens from Six Flags in 2007 and leased it back to PARC Management. The park was rebranded simply as 'Elitch Gardens'. In 2011 CNL terminated its lease with PARC Management. Then Herschend Family Entertainment was chosen to operate the park, Herschend Family Entertainment operated the park until 2015 when Premier Parks, LLC, the current operator of the park took over.

Redevelopment edit

The 28-acre (11 ha) site of the former amusement park has undergone redevelopment as Highlands' Garden Village. The site won the Environmental Protection Agency's 2005 Overall Excellence in Smart Growth award [10] for its new urbanism development of 308 housing units and a variety of office and retail spaces. The site maintained many of the old trees and other park elements, including the historic Elitch Theatre, the entertainment gazebo, and the structure that once housed the carousel, which is now a picnic structure. The new development exceeded Colorado's Built Green and Energy Star programs and also used recycled construction materials [11] Wal-Mart Stores Inc. wanted to build one of its Neighborhood Market grocery stores at the site, but neighborhood residents protested the store, saying they didn't want a Wal-Mart in the area. In the fall of 2004, Wal-Mart decided not to build it. Sunflower Farmers Market announced they would anchor the center with a grocery store in July 2005.[12] In January 2009 the Sunflower Market retail building at HGV Green Commons was designated as the first LEED core and shell Gold Supermarket in the United States.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ Borrillo, Theodore A. (2012). Denver's historic Elitch Theatre : a nostalgic journey (a history of its times). [publisher not identified]. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-9744331-4-1. OCLC 823177622.
  2. ^ Borrillo, Theodore A. (2012). Denver's historic Elitch Theatre : a nostalgic journey (a history of its times). [publisher not identified]. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-0-9744331-4-1. OCLC 823177622.
  3. ^ Fisher, Steve. "Dancing at the Troc". University of Denver Magazine. Spring 2004.
  4. ^ Mr. Twister (Elitch Gardens). Roller Coaster DataBase.
  5. ^ a b "In the Gardens of Elitch. — Themerica". December 26, 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-12-26.
  6. ^ Will, Ed. "ELITCH GARDENS REBORN: Patience the watchword for opening day at Denver's new (old) amusement park". Denver Post, May 26, 1995: Weekend page 22.
  7. ^ Robinson, Marilyn. "Fire spurs call to up security Old Elitch park scene of blaze." Denver Post, November 4, 1995: B-01.
  8. ^ "Second fire at old Elitch's". Denver Post, November 6, 1995: B-03.
  9. ^ Olgeirson, Ian. "Forecast for Elitch's: Visitor numbers flat". Denver Business Journal, September 20, 1996.
  10. ^ EPA Smart Growth: 2005 National Award for Smart Growth Achievement. United States Environmental Protection Agency. August 2, 2006.
  11. ^ Jonathan Rose Companies > Projects > Highlands' Garden Village Archived 2006-04-29 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Moore, Paula. "Retail building starts at old Elitch's site". Denver Business Journal. November 3, 2006.
  13. ^ "Jonathan Rose Companies > Projects > Highlands' Garden Village".

Further reading edit

  • Documentary film Welcome Back Riders (2007)
  • Hull, Betty Lynne (2003). Denver's Elitch Gardens : spinning a century of dreams. Boulder, CO: Johnson Books. ISBN 1-55566-285-4.
  • Hunt, Corrine (1982). The Elitch Gardens story : memories of Jack Gurtler. Boulder, CO: Rocky Mountain Writers Guild. ISBN 978-0-937050-27-9.
  • KRMA-TV (1995). Rocky Mountain Legacy: Elitch Gardens (Videotape). Denver, CO: Council for Public Television, Channel 6, Inc.
  • Levy, Edwin Lewis (1960). Elitch's Gardens, Denver, Colorado: a history of the oldest summer theatre in the United States (1890-1941). OCLC 15110556.

External links edit