Current:Home > reviewsThe history of Ferris wheels: What goes around comes around -Prime Capital Blueprint
The history of Ferris wheels: What goes around comes around
View
Date:2025-04-17 16:00:20
For many, summer fun means thrill rides rule that soar, swirl, and defy gravity. But if you need a break from holding your breath, there's one attraction that lets you catch it: The Ferris wheel, a slow-moving salvation from all that speed.
Ferris wheels have been turning for more than 130 years, the first one constructed for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, designed by George Washington Gale Ferris.
Paul Durica, director of exhibitions at the Chicago History Museum, notes that Ferris was an up-and-coming engineer in the early 1890s, when an announcement went out from the World's Fair organizers seeking a large-scale attraction, one that would top the pièce de resistance at the previous World's Fair in Paris, the Eiffel Tower. "What a lot of people were responding with were designs that were very similar: We'll just build a bigger tower than the Eiffel Tower," Durica said. "But it was George Washington Gale Ferris who had the idea to make something on a similar scale but allow it to move."
Legend has it he was inspired watching a water wheel turn. "He believed all along in the science, in the engineering, and he knew that it could work, even though it hadn't been done," Durica said.
Built in less than six months, his wheel opened to the public in June 1893. The steel structure was massive, climbing 264 feet, with 36 cars, each carrying 60 passengers. At the time, it was the tallest object in Chicago.
"It was an experience unlike people had ever really had before," Durica said. "You really sort of lose yourself in the experience as the world below you faded away and then suddenly came back into view, faded away again…"
It's a sensation that endures to this day, with Ferris wheels (or observation wheels) spinning worldwide, in London, Las Vegas, and in Dubai, where one rises more than 800 feet.
"Sunday Morning" paid a visit to the 300-foot-tall Dream Wheel in New Jersey. "The original Ferris wheel was steam-driven; we are 100 percent electronic. No steam, no hydraulics, just all electronics," said David Moore, the general operations manager.
Saberi asked, "What makes a wheel so enticing to engineers like yourself?"
"The size, the movement, and it's a pure work of art in the sky, spinning, with people on it enjoying themselves," Moore said.
Professor and author Caron Levis captures the whimsy of a Ferris wheel in her children's book, "Stop That Yawn." Saberi met her at the famed Wonder Wheel at Coney Island, which has been running since 1920.
"We're just naturally drawn to it, both as just people, but also writers and artists," Levis said.
The wheel has its place in popular culture, from the romantic in "The Notebook," to the menacing, with Orson Welles in "The Third Man."
As for the original, Paul Durica said it came to a halt soon after the Chicago World's Fair ended, when it was demolished. "Nobody wants it, so they decide basically to dynamite it. And that's the sad end of the original Ferris wheel," he said.
Out of over a hundred thousand parts, a bolt is one of the few pieces that remains. Where the original Ferris wheel stood, today an ice rink is in its place.
What Ferris built also broke him. He went bankrupt, got typhoid fever, and died at age 37, in 1896.
But all these years later, his invention keeps spinning, bringing a smile to Tom, Ron and Cougar Peck – Ferris' great-great-great-great-nephews.
They took a ride with us on the Centennial Wheel in Chicago. Saberi asked, "When you see all the kids getting off of this wheel, and other wheels, how does that make you feel?"
"Very proud," Tom replied. "The tradition's carrying on."
And what would George Ferris think of all the wheels around the world today? According to Durica, "George Ferris would not be surprised at all about the popularity of his invention. He knew it would work. He would probably say, if he surveyed the world and looked at things like the Wonder Wheel at Coney Island, the London Eye, 'See, I told you so. This is a great attraction!'"
GALLERY: Early photos of amusement parks
For more info:
- Deno's Wonder Wheel, Coney Island, N.Y.
- Dream Wheel, East Rutherford, New Jersey
- Centennial Wheel, Chicago
- Chicago History Museum
- "Stop That Yawn" by Caron Levis, illustrated by LeUyen Pham (Atheneum Books for Young Readers), in Hardcover and eBook formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
Story produced by Gabriel Falcon. Editor: Joseph Frandino.
veryGood! (794)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Eagles' Tush Push play is borderline unstoppable. Will it be banned next season?
- India’s Supreme Court upholds government’s decision to remove disputed Kashmir’s special status
- NFL playoff picture Week 14: Cowboys seize NFC East lead, Eagles slide
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Thousands march in Europe in the latest rallies against antisemitism stoked by the war in Gaza
- The Golden Globe nominees are out. Let the awards season of Barbenheimer begin – Analysis
- Supreme Courts in 3 states will hear cases about abortion access this week
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Anna Cardwell, 'Here Comes Honey Boo Boo' star, dies at 29 following cancer battle
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- LGBTQ+ activists in Minnesota want prosecutors to treat the killing of a trans woman as a hate crime
- Dak Prescott, Brandon Aubrey help Cowboys pull even with Eagles in NFC East with 33-13 victory
- Fantasy football waiver wire Week 15 adds: 5 players you need to consider picking up now
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Micah Parsons listed on Cowboys' injury report with illness ahead of Eagles game
- Biden invites Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to meet with him at the White House
- Elon Musk allows controversial conspiracy theorist Alex Jones back on X
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Shohei Ohtani free agency hysteria brought out the worst in MLB media. We can do better.
Bachelor in Paradise's Aven Jones Apologizes to Kylee Russell for Major Mistakes After Breakup
Joe Flacco named Browns starting quarterback for rest of season after beating Jaguars
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
AP PHOTOS: On Antarctica’s ice and in its seas, penguins in a warming world
Why 'Friends' is the 'heartbeat' of Julia Roberts sci-fi movie 'Leave the World Behind'
Biden administration says New Hampshire computer chip plant the first to get funding from CHIPS law