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  1. The Allan Herschell Company, founded in North Tonawanda, New York, was the fourth in a series of companies in the community which manufactured carousels and other amusement park rides. Allan Herschell had previously been a partner in the earliest of the area’s carousel firms: the Armitage Herschell Company, in 1873, and later with the ...

  2. Starting in the 1930', the company began building adult rides, such as the "Twister," the "Hurricane" and the "Sky Wheel," a double Ferris wheel nearly 90 feet tall. [3] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 as the Allan Herschell Carousel Factory. [1]

  3. Herschell did not create just carousel rides, but expanded to include rides made for children and adults. He thought up the concept for rides specialized for small children, called "Kiddieland". Twister, Hurricane, Flying Bobs, and the Sky Wheel were thrill rides that catered towards adults.

  4. Mar 16, 2015 · Herschell created the Herschell Spillman Company with his in-laws, the Spillmans. The Herschell Spillman company started out creating and carving carousels in a traditional style but later branching out to create larger park machines, such as elaborate carousels with many types of animals.

  5. Nov 24, 2023 · Today, that factory is open as the Herschell Carrousel Factory Museum in North Tonawanda, about halfway between downtown Buffalo and Niagara Falls. At one time the Allan Herschell Carrousel Company was the most prominent of four different carousel companies in the town.

  6. Sep 6, 2015 · The crusaders brought the game back to Europe where it became, in time, an extravagant display of horsemanship and finery that the French called carrousel. The royalty of the 18th century wanted to have the fanciest carousel ride possible in their private gardens.

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  8. Oct 19, 2016 · Herschell was a Scottish immigrant who got his start working with steam engines in New York State. When he discovered the magic of the European carousel in 1882, he began building steam-run merry-go-rounds and completed his first carousel in 1884.

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