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Disneyland
History of Disneyland
How Disneyland Came into Existence
Walt Disney and his brother Roy already headed one of
Hollywood's more successful studios founded in 1923 long before the
idea of a park even began to form. Walt's original concept was of a
permanent family fun park without the negative element which
traveling carnivals often attracted. He developed the idea during
his many outings with his daughters Diane and Sharon, when he
realized that there were no parks with activities that parents and
children could enjoy together.
While many people had written letters to Walt Disney about visiting
the Disney Studio lot and meeting their favorite Disney character,
Walt realized that a functional movie studio had little to offer to
the visiting fan. He then began to foster ideas of building a site
at or near his Burbank studios for tourists to visit and perhaps
take pictures with Disney characters set in statue form. His ideas
then evolved to a small play park with a boat ride and other themed
areas. These ideas grew bigger and bigger into a concept for a
larger enterprise which was to become Disneyland.
Disneyland was partially inspired by Tivoli Gardens (built in 1843
in Copenhagen, Denmark), Greenfield Village (built in 1929 in
Dearborn, Michigan), and Children's Fairyland (built in 1950 in
Oakland, California). Disney's original modest plans called for the
park to be built on eight acres (32,000 m²) on Riverside Drive next
to the Disney Studios in Burbank, California as a place where his
employees and families could go to relax.
Early in development, during the early 1950s, it became clear that
more area would be needed. Difficulties in obtaining funding caused
Disney to investigate new ways of raising money. He decided to use
television to get the ideas into people's homes, and so he created
a show named Disneyland which was broadcast on the fledgling
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television network. In return,
the network agreed to help finance the new park.
On the suggestion of researchers at Stanford Research Institute
who correctly envisioned the area's potential growth, Disney
acquired 160 acres (730,000 m²) of orange groves and walnut trees
in Anaheim, south of Los Angeles in neighboring Orange County. [1]
[2] Construction began on July 18, 1954 and would cost USD$17
million to complete. U.S. Highway 101 (later Interstate 5) was
under construction at the same time just to the north of the site;
in preparation for the traffic which Disneyland was expected to
bring, two more lanes were added to the freeway even before the
park was finished.
Because of his brother Roy's distrust of the project, and because
of financial considerations, Walt Disney was forced to turn to
outside financing for his theme park. For the first five years of
its operation, Disneyland was owned by Disneyland, Inc., of which
Walt Disney Productions and ABC each owned half. In 1960, Walt
Disney Productions bought ABC's share of the theme park.
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