Showing posts with label Chemical Wagon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chemical Wagon. Show all posts

Saturday, September 06, 2025

Comin' At Ya, August 1957!



Take your Dramamine this morning, readers, as this trio of Genuine FauxD© images from August 1957 could get your stomach going. The Kalamazoo Handcar is on display at the Main Street Train Station, and the population reads 5 million. Below, I combined the left and right images to get a slightly wider view for you. Now you can see a portion of the Storybook Land attraction poster at right:



In Town Square, the Horse-Drawn Fire/Chemical Wagon is ready to take on a few guests for a trip to the Castle. Only 10¢!



The wider view below:



Last one from this trio shows the Suwannee Lady at the dock of the Jungle Cruise attraction:



The wider view shows…well, not much more other than the last two letters of the name of the boat:



See more Disneyland photos at my main website.

Wednesday, March 05, 2025

Modern Screen, August 1955: Disneyland



For the August 1955 issue of Modern Screen Magazine, actress Pier Angeli graced the cover. Inside, the gossip mag gave three full pages of coverage for the recently opened Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California. The first spread included a color photo of the Sleeping Beauty Castle model:



The historic model was on display at the Disneyland Opera House when I shot it in February 2007:



…and in June 2008:





One can “assume” that while the article came out one month after the Park opened, the feature was put together while Disneyland was still under construction, thus the model shots. A photo of Walt with a colt  from April 1954 was also used. Here’s the uncropped version from my collection:



The article features two “young stars,” Marla English and Larry Pennell, who posed for pictures at the Walt Disney Studio in Burbank, where the rides and vehicles were being construction/refurbished. Below are trees from the Snow White attraction and the Horse-Drawn Chemical/Fire Wagon:



A shot of the Chemical Wagon from 1956 taken in the Park:



The second page of the spread included color shots of the Main Street, Adventureland, and Mark Twain models:



A closeup of the Main Street model, which still had the bandstand situated in Town Square:



An August 1955 black and white closeup of the same model:



Closeups of the other models:





A closeup of one of the Stagecoaches, with Marla and Larry looking very lovey-dovey:



An August 1954 image from my collection of the same stagecoach, also shot at the Disney Studio in Burbank; note the corrugated wall, visible in many of the images from the Modern Screen article:



The last page of the feature included a map and other studio-shot photos of more vehicles and animals (both real and fake):



You might recognize Pennell from “The Beverly Hillbillies,” where he played Dash Riprock. Marla’s claim to fame was being cast opposite Spencer Tracy in “The Mountain” (1955), and then deciding to withdraw from the project. Marla told the columnists that she left as a result of hospitalization due to a recently administered smallpox vaccine. According to the St. Petersburg Times, September 18, 1955, this was the real reason, according to a close relative of Marla:

Said she: “Marla has fallen in love with a young Paramount player, Bud Pennell. She desperately wanted the studio to give him a part in “The Mountain.” Then the two of them could have gone off to France together. When the studio refused, she blew her top. A woman in love will do anything.” This, a Paramount executive conceded, was basically correct. “Only an actress in love,” he added, “would give up a picture with Spencer Tracy.”

At least they had Disneyland…

See more Disneyland brochures and map photos at my main website.

Friday, October 01, 2021

Disneyland Tour, July 1958: Part 2



Our July 1958 Disneyland Tour has progressed to Town Square. I love the cutout detail on the lamppost for the Horse-Drawn Streetcar:



Note the patriotic bunting (it is July, folks!) and the signage hailing the debut of the Columbia: “Full Rigged 3 Masted.”



Need a lift? Plenty of choices in Town Square, from the Omnibus:



The Chemical Wagon:



The Horseless Carriage:



…and the previously mentioned Horse-Drawn Streetcar:



A shot down Main Street, facing towards the Castle:



A closeup of the banner and the cleanup-crew:



Don’t forget to stop at the Kodak Shop to have a nifty old-time photo taken of you and your sweetheart:



Want to know what to do on Main Street? Here are some listings from a 1958 brochure:



Next up: Central Plaza!

See more Disneyland photos at my main website.

Monday, June 29, 2020

Central Plaza Details



The first view from today shows Central Plaza in 1956. Yes, the kids are adorable, but I love that “Be A Fireman” sign!


This shot of the Omnibus at the base of Snow Hill (which would eventually become The Matterhorn) also shows the House of the Future. I believe this shot is from December 1957. Construction of the House of the Future didn’t start until January 1957, and the other shots from this batch show Christmas decor.


Two gents survey Disneyland from Snow Hill...without the Snow.


Look at the crowd of folks near the House of the Future! And of course the little boy in the Tom Sawyer hat.


From the same batch as the previous photo we move over to Tomorrowland to see the ever popular Clock of the World.


Now a closer look (as always):


Besides the nuns, check out the Noel decor on front of the Hall of Chemistry and the Kaiser Aluminum sign. This is the first time I’d noticed that sign; checking my collection though, I realized I have a color shot of it!


See more Disneyland Tomorrowland photos at my main website.

Tuesday, April 02, 2019

Town Square on a Tuesday



How about a leisurely Tuesday spent in 1950s Town Square at Disneyland? A ride on the Fire Truck is only 10¢; what a value! The curtains of Walt’s Apartment are open; could he be home?



And if you’ve lost the kiddies (unintentionally, of course!) you can inquire about them at City Hall.



Flash forward to 1960 and no such sign exists. Nobody wants those missing kids, I guess. #brats



Rotating around the Square we come to the Opera House in 1960, before Abe moved in.



Drat the photographer! Teasing me with these two window shots, but the photos are too grainy to get much good detail.





In response to Matthew's two comments yesterday...unfortunately, due to quality of camera, depth of field, and other sundry reasons too boring to mention, sometimes a zoom-in yields disappointing results so I avoid. Here are two such examples. This closeup of the info sign at the entrance is not much better than the one I posted yesterday; still blurry.



And this blob of brown could be a mountain goat. Or a cast member bending over. Or just a blob of brown. Hard to tell.



See more Disneyland photos at my main website.