Ebenezer Floppen Slopper's Wonderful Water Slides, Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois. (1980-1987)
Ebenezer Floppen Slopper's Wonderful Water Slides (aka Doc Rivers Raging Rapids Water Park) is an abandoned waterpark located on a large hill on Roosevelt Road and Route 83 in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois.
It first opened on July 5, 1980, with two 800 foot concrete water slides and gradually added 5 additional slides and a wading pool. The water park became a major summer attraction for residents of surrounding towns and communities as people lined up for rides down the large winding slides.
When the two main slides first began operation, people slid down in groups of up to eight people at a time on rubber mats. The 5 other slides added to the park included 2 flat racer slides in which people slid down headfirst on folded rubber mats, 2 semi-enclosed tube body slides, and a smaller inner tube slide which emptied into a nearby wading pool. The slides were also unique in that they were lined with a blue rubber foam material which would prevent injuries from contacts with the slide walls. Due to the design of the 2 main large concrete slides, especially with the V-shaped configuration of their sidewalls, people could also slide quite high up the walls of the slides, especially when hitting a turn at high speeds.
Around 1987, the large concrete slides were resurfaced with flat bottoms with humps and bumps in which people went down solo, on inner tubes, getting bumped up and down and sideways as they went down the renovated slides and the park was renamed "Doc River's Roaring Rapids Water Park."
The park subsequently closed for good at the end of the 1989 season for unknown reasons. Compiled by Neil Gale, Ph.D.
Thank you for this article. I moved to Chicagoland in November 1989 and lived and/or worked in DuPage County for several decades. I have driven by the park site on Route 83 a kajillion times and always wondered what it used to be.
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And in the winter, when the trees are bare, you can still see the slides through the brush.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this article. I moved to Chicagoland in November 1989 and lived and/or worked in DuPage County for several decades. I have driven by the park site on Route 83 a kajillion times and always wondered what it used to be.
ReplyDeleteSlides are still there now decorated in graffiti.
ReplyDeleteBefore there were any of the slides the property was actually a landfill.
In the 1960s it was known locally as “Mt. Trashmore.” When the dump filled up to ground level, it was shut down and covered.