Sunday, October 10, 2010

Palisades Amusement Park


My first trip to New York City was in 1964. My father had business with NY Tel, the parent company of New England Tel. He drove our Ford Station Wagon down from Boston. My mother sat in the front seat. My older brother and I were in the back. New York was a city that we knew from movies and TV. Nothing could have prepared my brother and me for that view from the Bronx.

Skyscrapers, bridges, and people.

My mother took us sightseeing during the day. The Empire State Building, the Hudson River, and Battery Park. We saw the Statue of Liberty from the Staten Island Ferry. My father bought tickets to the Rockettes at Radio City and we ate at Tad's Steak House in Times Square.

I should have been a happy camper, however New York's attractions were a detour from my true destination.

Palisades Amusement Park across the river in New Jersey. Every one of my comic books had tickets for rides. I cut them out before my father tore the comic books to pieces. He hated them as low-brow entertainment. he never found the tickets and my pockets were bulging with the flimsy pieces of paper. They were valuable only one place and I begged my father to take us there.

"It's only across the river." Freddie Cannon had a hit song about the park in 1962. Rock and roll bands appeared nightly and I had heard three advertisements for the park on the radio.

My father refused on the grounds that it was too far away and that might I sat in the hotel staring westward. The park was on 130th Street. A long way from the Manhattan Hotel. I swore that I could see its glow. My brother told me to go to sleep. He was a light sleeper.

The next morning my father drove north, telling me that the following weekend we would go to Paragon park at Nantasket Beach. It had a great wooden roller coaster and fun houses.

"It's just as good as Palisades Park."

"How would you know?" No one had ever written a song about Paragon Park.

"Because I wanted to go there as a kid too. The closest I got was the same as you."

"So why didn't we go today?" Like any young boy I couldn't picture my father as a boy my age.

"Because there wasn't the time."

"Oh." It wasn't a good answer, but I had a feeling that it was the same thing he had heard from his father.

"Maybe we'll go to Palisades Park next time."

Only there wasn't a next time.

Palisades Park closed in 1971. The owner sold it to developers, who promised one more summer atop the cliffs. I was a hippie then. More into the Jefferson Airplane than golden oldies such as PALISADES PARK. Like my old teddy bear it disappeared from the now the the that that was.

There was a lot of that going around those days.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I grew up in Virginia but my parents were born and raised in NYC. My grandparents lived at 820 West End Ave. I too dreamed of going to the Palisades. Never got there either. Spent every holiday and summers there and went to Radio City Music Hall, Empire State Building, Kennedy Center, Statue of Liberty, Staten Island (and thought we were all going to die when the ferry hit the pilings and it seemed as though we were going to tip over) Central Park, and of course Riverside Park. I begged and begged to go to the Palisades and my parents and grandparents always said we would go and since we had always gone everywhere else I kept believing and hoping but for some reason it never happened. I will always wonder why it never happened . . . .

Anonymous said...

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MANGOZEEN BLOGGER said...

I recently walked across the GW Bridge to Fort Lee. My friend has a house where the salt-water swimming pool used to be. I stood outside and tried to imagine the lights and sounds and people. I didn't have to close my eyes, because I had always dreamed about it with my eyes open.