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WHITE CITY IS OPENED
Newspaper Men of the City
and State View Amuse-
ment Park.
MILLION SPENT ON PLACE
Declared to Be the Most Elab-
orate Enterprise of Its Kind
in the Country.
The Chicago
Record-Herald, 27 May 1905
When one quarter of a milion incandescent lights flashed into
brilliancy at 8 o'clock last night at Sixty-third street and South
Park avenue they formed the initial illumination for the largest park
in the United States devoted exclusively to amusement. White City, the
new summer pleasure center, which announces itself as "dedicated
to merriment and mirth," began its civic career as a municipality
of fun at that time, when it threw open its gates to the newspaper men
of Chicago and Illinois. To-day at 1 o'clock the city will open to the
public, so to remain until the end of the season.
Fourteen acres of ground have been converted into this city of
pleasure and $1,000,000 has been expended to supply it with the latest
ideas in summer amusements. Expense has not been spared to make White
City the most elaborate place of its kind in the country.
Dazzling with Light.
All the buildings are constructed of white cement and lighted
with rows and festoons of electric lights, which trace the outlines of
the structures, the result being dazzling. In the center of the
grounds rises the electric tower, with 20,000 incandescent lights and
a powerful searchlight.
The park is in the form of an oblong, one-fourth of a mile long
and one-twelfth of a mile wide. Down the middle runs the sunken
garden, with a stand for the Banda Rossa in the middle, and relieved
with pots of flowers and ferns. On either side and at the ends rise
the buildings, each one containing some distinct amusement feature.
The attraction each house contains is blazoned across its front in
incandescent lights, so it is easy to see from almost any part of the
city where any particular one is situated.
Many Novel Attractions.
The main center of life at the city promises to be the ballroom
and College Inn, which occupy adjoining structures, the largest on the
grounds. The ballroom will accomodate 1,000 dancers, while College
Inn, which is decorated with college flags and coats-of-arms, will
seat 2,400 diners.
The main set attraction is likely to be the fire show, which
gives a representation of a fire in a hotel so true to life that it is
difficult to realize that it is but a mimic scene. In front of the
grand stand has been built a city square. Business blocks and shops,
as seen while in the street, real cars and carriages pass to and fro.
Suddenly there is an alarm of fire, and flames are seen bursting from
the windows of the five-story hotel. Real fire engines respond, and
then takes place an apparently real battle with the flames, during
which there are thrilling scenes.
Cummins' Indian congress promises to be another of the most
popular features, 150 Inidans and cowboys giving a representation of
Custer's last stand in true western fashion.
The enterprise is due entirely to Chicago capital and energy.
Joseph Beifeld is president of the White City Company, with Edward C.
Boyce as vice president, Aaron J. Jones as secretary, and Paul D.
Howse as general manager. Members of the Illinois Press Association,
the Chicago Press Club and the Milwaukee Press Club attended last
night. |
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