Puritas Springs Park
Puritas Springs Park was an amusement park located in Cleveland, Ohio, overlooking the Rocky River Valley.
It opened around the dawn of the 20th century and operated until financial difficulties led to its closure in 1958. The land on which it once stood is now home to a residential development.
History
Puritas Springs bottling
The land on which the amusement park would eventually be built was originally developed by the Cleveland, Berea, Elyria & Oberlin Railway. In the mid 1890s, the company purchased land in the area and began to bottle and sell water from the local springsEstablishment and early days
The railway company and Albert Akins, its vice president, soon made plans to create a park at the Puritas Springs site. They hoped to attract guests to the area and profit from increased rail ticket sales. The Cleveland, Berea, Elyria, and Oberlin Railway began service to the park gates on June 10, 1900. In the early days, the Puritas Springs did not include a merry-go-round, a Ferris Wheel, or other staple attractions of more modern amusement parks; like many parks of the time, it provided simpler amenities, such as a dance hall, camp sites and picnic areas.Transformation
John Gooding was a very important figure in the history of the park, though sources disagree on whether Gooding founded the park or became involved around 1908. He owned the park outright by the end of 1915 and directed many changes until his death in the 1930s.John Gooding began to transform the park by installing mechanized rides such as merry go rounds. In 1922, seven years after acquiring the park, he installed an enclosed roller skating rink, which featured a band organ. 1927 saw the installation of the Cyclone, a roller coaster designed by coaster pioneer John Miller. The Cyclone opened on June 10, 1928, and soon became the park's main attraction.
Gooding died in the mid 1930s, but the park remained under the ownership of his family until its closure.