Sunday, April 22, 2012
TPE: Casey Jr. & Storybook Land
This may be one of my weirder requests for my Time Machine, but I would really want to visit Disneyland between Opening Day and June 1956 so that I could see Storybook Land...without the Storybook.
It seems hard to believe that Casey Jr and the Canal Boats actually gave guests a tour of the muddy (and apparently weed-filled) banks of Storybook Land, aka Canal Boats of the World.
At least the ornate circus-themed vehicles of Casey Jr. provided an element of fun.
The boats though...how did the cast members drive these and point out the "scenery" and keep a straight face?
Apparently they got very good at the deadpan as they recited lines like this: “The miniature landscaping is so miniature you can't see it!”
I'd also want to ride Dumbo, too. Why? Because I could get a good aerial view of the construction, and because I'd want to capture the Dumbo ears in movement, back when they flapped up and down.
The next 9 photos were shot sequentially, circa 1955:
I have to zoom in to see the Ticket Booth window:
Some of these vehicles were salvaged from the original carousel that most of the King Arthur Carrousel horses came from:
The Chicken of the Sea Mermaid from the Pirate Ship Restaurant is visible in the foreground as Casey chugs along in the background:
The Russian Olympic Team from 1956 that we saw a few days ago is back, this time trapped in a monkey cage.
Construction of the patchwork quilt:
Signage geeks rejoice with this March 8, 1956 image:
Workers are visible as we zoom in, catching them with less than 3 months left to finish the new and improved Storybook Land attraction:
See more vintage & current Casey Jr. photos on my Casey Jr. web page.
I can just imagine the spiel given on the Canal Boats before Storybook Land. Those are great early images.
ReplyDeleteWhat a treasure.
ReplyDeleteThose are special views of my single favorite pair of attractions.
ReplyDeleteI don't remember any of this, by my time, the stories and the plants had taken firm root.
Thank you Dave, for a revealing glimpse back. I'm in hopes of a return visit to examine the miniatures in detail.
JG