I am in SO much trouble...
Sunday, May 29th, 2005 08:33 pmI am now the proud creator/possessor of a color-coded timeline of Events of Epic Proportion that took place in Old Orchard Beach, Maine from 1603 (Martin Pring enters Saco Bay and lands at Old Orchard Beach) to 2004 (Fire: Dy-No-Mite). And may Ghu have mercy on my soul.
I do still have some question marks. Like, which hotel burned in the Summer of 1882? Was the first carousel, installed at OOB in 1892, the one described elsewhere as being on the beach itself, or an entirely different ride? Was the wooden roller coaster added to Seaside Park in 1914 or in 1917, and were either of them a Jack Rabbit -- or is the idea that there had ever been a Jack Rabbit at OOB merely the product of a dedicated roller coastie's fevered imagination? What exactly burned in the 1975 fire? Was White City destroyed by fire in 1909 and rebuilt, only to be destroyed again in 1969 when "Detzel" the carousel burned, taking most of the rest of the amusements with it?
I have measured the depths of Joy and Despair this day, let me tell you. At first, I believed that the Euclid Carousel Nuts had (re)purchased the existing Old Orchard Beach merry-go-round, which Playland (the OOB amusement vendor) purchased from Euclid Beach Park in 1970, after Detzel burned -- and I was desolate, believing that I would never again ride the carousel at the ocean.
But wait! Further investigation produces the factoid that the Euclid Beach ride has been in storage since 1997, awaiting restoration and a suitable site. Relief! The carousel now at OOB is yet a fourth iteration of the ride, and still in residence.
I hope.
It's pretty weird to see stuff laid out side-by-side, like:
1914: WW I
?Wooden roller coaster added to Seaside Park?
I've also stumbled across this interesting little bit of trivia, courtesy of On This Date in New England Fire Rescue History:
Please note that in colonial times (until 1752) the calendar year did not change until March 25 (Feast of the Annunciation), therefore a date such as March, 11 1683 (in its day) would be considered March 11, 1684 by standards used today (new years day = Jan 1) - You may see some dates listed as March 11, 1683/4. This shows both old and new style. Only dates between Jan 1 and Mar 25 and before 1752 are affected. Also in 1752, the date after Sept 2, 1752 became Sept 14, 1752.
Who knew?
Anyhow, I certainly have (more than) enough on which to hang the central argument of the novel that I'm not writing, oh-no-not-me.
*Happy sigh*
I do still have some question marks. Like, which hotel burned in the Summer of 1882? Was the first carousel, installed at OOB in 1892, the one described elsewhere as being on the beach itself, or an entirely different ride? Was the wooden roller coaster added to Seaside Park in 1914 or in 1917, and were either of them a Jack Rabbit -- or is the idea that there had ever been a Jack Rabbit at OOB merely the product of a dedicated roller coastie's fevered imagination? What exactly burned in the 1975 fire? Was White City destroyed by fire in 1909 and rebuilt, only to be destroyed again in 1969 when "Detzel" the carousel burned, taking most of the rest of the amusements with it?
I have measured the depths of Joy and Despair this day, let me tell you. At first, I believed that the Euclid Carousel Nuts had (re)purchased the existing Old Orchard Beach merry-go-round, which Playland (the OOB amusement vendor) purchased from Euclid Beach Park in 1970, after Detzel burned -- and I was desolate, believing that I would never again ride the carousel at the ocean.
But wait! Further investigation produces the factoid that the Euclid Beach ride has been in storage since 1997, awaiting restoration and a suitable site. Relief! The carousel now at OOB is yet a fourth iteration of the ride, and still in residence.
I hope.
It's pretty weird to see stuff laid out side-by-side, like:
1914: WW I
?Wooden roller coaster added to Seaside Park?
I've also stumbled across this interesting little bit of trivia, courtesy of On This Date in New England Fire Rescue History:
Please note that in colonial times (until 1752) the calendar year did not change until March 25 (Feast of the Annunciation), therefore a date such as March, 11 1683 (in its day) would be considered March 11, 1684 by standards used today (new years day = Jan 1) - You may see some dates listed as March 11, 1683/4. This shows both old and new style. Only dates between Jan 1 and Mar 25 and before 1752 are affected. Also in 1752, the date after Sept 2, 1752 became Sept 14, 1752.
Who knew?
Anyhow, I certainly have (more than) enough on which to hang the central argument of the novel that I'm not writing, oh-no-not-me.
*Happy sigh*
no subject
Date: 2005-05-30 01:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-05-31 05:09 pm (UTC)I'm thinking, I've gone this far, might as well write the sample and the proposal. I had so much fun writing Barnburner, and I already know I know how to mix the True with the Could-Be, and -- best to get it out of my system...
no subject
Date: 2005-06-01 04:38 pm (UTC)I know that feeling. As soon as I finish a few other details, there's One For Me on the table.