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Thursday, December 15, 2016

KiddyTown Amusement Park (1950-1967) / FunTown Amusement Park (1967-1982) on 95th and Stony Island in Chicago, Illinois.

Funtown Amusement Park at 1711 E. 95th Street at Stony Island Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, started life in 1950 as "KiddyTown." 
KiddyTown Amusement Park, like so many other "Kiddieland" Parks of that time, had a Fire Truck used to pick up kids from their homes and take them to the birthday parties at the park. The Fire Truck was also used as a ride, driving kids around the park.
This is an ad for Bowman Dairy Company for customers to save 4 Bowman bottle caps or carton tops, which entitles you to a 4-ride ticket for 25¢, except Sundays and holidays at the following parks; Fun Fair in Skokie; Kiddytown 95th & Stony Island, Chicago; Fairyland in Lyons; Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago; Kiddytown, Harlem and Irving Park Road, Chicago; and Sauzer’s Kiddyland in Dyer, Indiana. —Chicago Tribune May 15, 1956.

New owners, Allen and June Carvell bought KiddyTown Amusement Park in 1967 and ran that operation until they sold it in 1977. When the Carvell's bought KiddyTown in 1967 they changed the name of the park to Funtown Amusement Park.

KiddyTown originally charged a gate admission where all rides were free once inside. When the Carvell's bought the park they changed a single admission charge to the park to a ticket-per-ride system.
Funtown had some great rides like the Santa Fe miniature train, Mad Mouse roller coaster, the Trabant (Google it), the Moon Rocket, a Merry-Go-Round, a small Ferris wheel, the Rock-O-Planes, the Paratrooper, the Round-Up, the Octopus, Swinging Gym, and hand-cranked rail cars. 
They claimed to have the fastest Go Carts in the Chicago area. 
In the summer of 1977, Jack Johnson bought the park. Jack was a carnival guy who attempted to run the park like a moving carnival. As stated by a park manager who worked there from 1975 to 1982, owner Jack Johnson pilfered what he could from the park and chased customers, employees and managers away by mistreating them.


When Great America in Gurnee, Illinois opening in 1976, it was a contributing factor to the park's slow death. Jack Johnson sold the park around 1980 to another carnival owner, Bob Johnson (Big 'J' Funtown). Finally, in the fall of 1982, the rides were auctioned off and the land sold. 
The Funtown Jingle went like this: "Funtown, Funtown for the kids and you, 95th and Stone-e Island Av-e-nue, Funtown!" 
Note: There is a video on Youtube that is titled "FunTown (95th & Stony Island Ave.) DaMadMouseGroov"  
This is NOT footage from Chicago's Funtown. At the 2:42 minute mark, It states "Although we tried to find actual footage of FunTown Amusement Park... none could be found." 
THE CARVELL'S - OWNERS FROM 1967-77
Funtown Amusement Park at 95th and Stony Island was owned by Allan Carvell Jr. and his wife June Marie Carvell of Evanston, Illinois. In 1957, June Carvell and her husband opened the Rainbo Ice Skating Arena4812 N. Clark Streett, Chicago, and the Rainbo Sports and Skate shop.

The rink became quite popular, drawing hundreds of people during open skate sessions. It also served as a practice arena for figure skaters and hockey players. Mrs. Carvell also helped manage tennis operations at the Lincoln Park Tennis Club, where her husband, a tennis professional, gave lessons.

NOTE:
THESE PHOTOS ARE NOT THE CHICAGO FUNTOWN AMUSEMENT PARK. 

This is the Seaside Park, New Jersey's Fun Town Pier.
This is the Fun Town that was at 11707 N. Micke Grove Road in Lodi, California.
Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

6 comments:

  1. Jack Thompson wasn't the last owner of fun time the last owner of Fontana was mr. Harry Williams of Chicago

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  2. The kid in the hand-cranked train car is Ted Okuda in 1957.

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  3. Grew up on 93rd colfax would try to go to funtown every chance I got would walk there all the time,my favorite rides were the miniature Santa Fe train and the mad mouse rollercoaster,lot of people didn’t know but when it rained really heavy it would flood behind funtown really bad and some neighborhood kids made this man made rafts that we would float around on was really cool lol,next thing you knew funtown had closed for good,one of my best childhood memories I will always keepšŸ˜Ž

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  4. I lived on 76 and Maryland, my cousin came to stay with us every summer and we lived at Funtown. It's amazing how things seem so much bigger to you as a child. Best memories ever.

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  5. In late 1960, our family immigrated from South Africa to the US and settled in Chicago. My brother Chris and I were taken for a treat to Kiddy Town. I still have the tickets - they were a "Special" - 8 rides for 1$. We had not experienced a fun fair in South Africa and were overawed by the variety of rides. Dianne Scott

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