Some of the rides were the Tilt-a-Whirl, an Allan Herschell Co. Merry-Go-Round,
Philadelphia Toboggan Co. Little Dipper (purchased for $6,000 and installed in 1956), Mangels Co. Whip, Boats, and Sky Fighter, Herschell Kiddie Tanks, Eyerly Co. Midge-O-Racer, Handcars, Gasoline-powered Cars, a Tractor ride, a 5 car Ferris Wheel, and a Miniature Train with twin diesel engines. Pony rides were also available at the 5-acre park.
The kiddie train had a 150-foot curved tunnel, bridge, and elaborate depot for the 2,000-foot miniature railroad. The Ferris Wheel was "kiddie-sized," with the riders locked into cages for the duration of the ride. The Handcars were self-propelled cars on little train tracks; a rider would sit on the car with their leg stretched forwards and hand-crank the car around the track.
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. |
On the weekends, sometimes a small red fire engine with "KiddyTown" written on its side would sound its loud siren telling all the children in the neighborhood that some lucky kid is having a birthday party and they're all going to KiddyTown. Their first ride, of course, would be in the fire truck.
Like many other Chicagoland "Kiddie Parks," KiddyTown had a fire truck to pick up birthday party guests at their homes and deliver them to the amusement park. When the truck wasn't picking up partygoers, it was used as a ride in the park.
In early 1964, KiddyTown closed down and sold all the rides. The unofficial reason was diminishing revenues and offers to buy the property to develop a retail strip mall.
KiddyTown was replaced by the Unity Saving Bank and its parking lot. The location is a Panera, Chipotle, Forever Yogurt, Red Robin Sports Authority, X-sport Fitness, and Mattress Firm.
Hillcrest (Amusement) Park in Lemont, Illinois, purchased the "Little Dipper" wooden roller coaster for $6,000.00, but it cost them $66,000.00 to move it. It reopened in 1967 in Hillcrest Park, where it thrilled youngsters until that park closed in 2003.
The "Little Dipper" was bought and moved to a small amusement park in Marshall, Wisconsin called Little Amerricka Amusement Park (formerly Little A-Merrick-A; owned by a family named Merrick when Hillcrest Park was closed in 2003. The Little Amerricka Amusement Park is still open. The "Little Dipper" was renamed the "Meteor" and was operational for their 2007 season.
"In a barn in the Upper Michigan Peninsula in December 2019, I found the original Santa Fe train from Kiddy Town in Norridge. A lot of money, lighter and two trailers of train cars later, I brought them home to Greenville, IL, to the American Farm Heritage Museum, where the train is now undergoing restoration. I am desperately seeking photographs of the train, and I only know of the one in your history blog."
Hillcrest (Amusement) Park in Lemont, Illinois, purchased the "Little Dipper" wooden roller coaster for $6,000.00, but it cost them $66,000.00 to move it. It reopened in 1967 in Hillcrest Park, where it thrilled youngsters until that park closed in 2003.
The "Little Dipper" was bought and moved to a small amusement park in Marshall, Wisconsin called Little Amerricka Amusement Park (formerly Little A-Merrick-A; owned by a family named Merrick when Hillcrest Park was closed in 2003. The Little Amerricka Amusement Park is still open. The "Little Dipper" was renamed the "Meteor" and was operational for their 2007 season.
VIDEO
Take a ride on the "Little Dipper" roller coaster, now named the "Meteor," at Little Amerricka Amusement Park in Marshall, Wisconsin.
Ride the "Meteor" in the first-person point of view.
April 2021; D.B. emails me the following with photographs:
Dear Neil,
"In a barn in the Upper Michigan Peninsula in December 2019, I found the original Santa Fe train from Kiddy Town in Norridge. A lot of money, lighter and two trailers of train cars later, I brought them home to Greenville, IL, to the American Farm Heritage Museum, where the train is now undergoing restoration. I am desperately seeking photographs of the train, and I only know of the one in your history blog."
Photo by Carol Houfek. |
Photo by Walter Rieger. |
Photo by Carol Houfek. |
The Little Dipper Roller Coaster. Photo by Walter Rieger. |
By Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.