Sailing Ship Columbia
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Sailing Ship Columbia | |
Land | Frontierland |
Opening Date | June 4, 1958 |
The Sailing Ship Columbia is a a full-scale replica of the first American ship to circumnavigate the globe, located at the Disneyland park in Anaheim, California. Its passengers embark on a scenic, 12-minute journey around the Rivers of America. When it was constructed in 1958, it was the first three-masted windjammer to have been built in the United States in more than 100 years. The Columbia has entertained park visitors for nearly fifty years, including its continued role of Captain Hook's pirate ship in the park's popular Fantasmic show. In 1998 the ship was involved in a tragic accident when an improperly placed docking line tore a cleat loose from the dock, killing one man and injuring his wife.
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[edit] Ride Description
Passengers wait for the ship, which departs every 30 minutes, from inside a sheltered area located in the Frontierland section of the park,. The waiting area, which the Columbia shares with the Mark Twain Riverboat, is made to resemble a real dock, with cargo deliveries sharing space on the dock. Historic United States flags are displayed at the attraction’s entrance.
Passengers board the ship by climbing steps up onto the deck. Once on board, they can visit a nautical museum belowdeck, where there are crew, captain, and surgeon's quarters as well as the galley, all showing what life was like for the 1787 crew.
Once the ship casts off, it begins its voyage around the Rivers of America. The ship, which has three masts and rigging but does not unfurl its sails, is powered by a diesel engine. It runs along the same track, hidden by the green and yellow dye in the water, as the Mark Twain.
The captain provides a tongue-in-cheek running commentary as he calls orders to his crew, while recorded background music plays a selection of nautical songs such as "Blow the Man Down", and "Rolling Home". As the ship passes Fort Wilderness on Tom Sawyer Island, it fires a 12-guage blank from one of its ten cannons
Costumed Disney characters such as Peter Pan, Captain Hook, Wendy, and Mr. Smee occasionally appear aboard the ship to entertain the passengers.
The Sailing Ship Columbia operates only on the park’s busiest days, or when the Mark Twain is not operating, The attraction usually opens at 11am and closes at dusk. On evenings when Fantasmic! is being performed, the ship, which plays the role of Captain Hook’s pirate ship, will close earlier. When the ship is not operating, it is docked at Fowler’s Harbor, near the Splash Mountain attraction.
[edit] History
When Walt Disney decided that the Rivers of America needed more river traffic and wanted another large ship to join the Mark Twain, he asked Joe Fowler, who was Disneyland's construction supervisor and a former naval admiral, to pick a historic sailing ship for inspiration. After examining every maritime museum in the country, Fowler recommended the first American sailing ship to go around the world: the USS Columbia. However, there is only one known picture in existence of the original windjammer. WED researchers used it, along with research materials from the Library of Congress, to design the Columbia.
Architect Ray Wallace was commissioned in 1957 to work with Fowler in creating the construction plans. The ship was constructed at Todd Shipyards in San Pedro, California, where the Mark Twain 's hull was built a few years earlier. After Fowler told Disney that it was customary to put a silver dollar under each mast before it was set, Disney personally put a silver dollar under each of the Columbia's three masts.
For the ship’s christening on June 4, 1958, Fowler was dressed as a sailing captain of the 1700's, while the Mousketeers appeared as his crew. Since then, the Sailing Ship Columbia has had many extensive refurbishments, but the only major change has been the addition of the crew quarters exhibit in 1964.
[edit] Accidents
- See also: Incidents at Disney parks
On December 24, 1998, a cleat used to secure the ship to the dock tore loose, striking park visitors Luan Phi Dawson of Duvall, Washington and his wife in the head, as their two children and other horrified park visitors looked on. Dawson was declared brain dead two days later and died when his life support system was disconnected in the head. A park employee was also injured.
This accident resulted in the first guest death in Disneyland's history that was not attributable to any negligence on the part of the guest. California's Division of Occupational Safety and Health investigated the incident and found fault with the training of a park employee, who placed the docking line on the cleat even though the clear was not intended to help brake the ship, but only hold her in place once she had already docked. Ride procedures call for the ship's captain to reverse the ship if it overshoots the dock and then re-approach the dock at the correct speed. Cal/OSHA fined Disneyland $12,500 for the error, while the theme park settled a lawsuit with the victim's survivors for $25,000,000, according to a Los Angeles Times estimate.[1]
[edit] Attraction facts
- Grand opening: June 4, 1958
- Major additions: 1964
- Construction Cost: $300,000 [2]
- Height: 84 feet
- Length: 83 1/2 feet [3]
- Width: 24 feet
- Passenger Capacity: 300
- Ride Duration: 12 minutes
- Required ticket: "D" (discontinued)
- Ride system: Boat Ride
[edit] Sound Track
- "Show Narration", 3:25
- "Haul Boys Haul", 2:05
- "Oh Johnny Come to Hilo", 2:30
- "Song of the Fishes", 1:41
- "Drunken Sailor", 1:51
- "A Whale of a Tail", 1:44
- "An American Frigate", 2:08
- "Blow the Man Down", 2:12
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Bright, Randy [1987]. Disneyland:Inside Story. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 141. 0-8109-0811-5.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Husband Killed And Wife Disfigured By Disney's Sailing Ship Columbia (2000). Aitken, Aitken, Cohn. Retrieved on 2006-10-18.
- ^ Polsson, Ken (September 28, 2006). Chronology of Disneyland Theme Park (1956-1959). Retrieved on 2006-10-18.
- ^ Ward, Dale (June 16, 2005). Mouse FACTory 6.0. Jim Hill Media. Retrieved on 2006-10-18.
[edit] External links
- Sailing Ship Columbia at Disneyland.Disney.Go.com
- Sailing Ship Columbia at AllEarsNet.com
- Sailing Ship Columbia at MousePlanet.com