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Mark Twain Riverboat

Mark Twain Riverboat
Mark Twain Riverboat.JPG
Mark Twain Riverboat at Disneyland
Disneyland
Area Frontierland
Coordinates 33°48′44″N 117°55′14″W / 33.81226°N 117.92062°W / 33.81226; -117.92062
Status Under Refurbishment
Opening date July 17, 1955
Magic Kingdom
Name The Liberty Belle
Area Liberty Square
Coordinates 28°25′11″N 81°34′58″W / 28.4196°N 81.5829°W / 28.4196; -81.5829
Status Operating
Opening date October 2, 1971
Tokyo Disneyland
Area Westernland
Coordinates 35°37′54″N 139°52′59″E / 35.63156°N 139.88303°E / 35.63156; 139.88303
Status Operating
Opening date April 15, 1983
Disneyland Park (Paris)
Area Frontierland
Coordinates 48°52′16″N 2°46′35″E / 48.8711°N 2.7763°E / 48.8711; 2.7763
Status Under Refurbishment
Opening date April 12, 1992
General statistics
Attraction type Steamboat
Designer Walt Disney Imagineering
Music "Down in New Orleans"
Country-style background music
Host Your Captain (Stephen Stanton)
Handicapped/disabled access Wheelchair accessible

Mark Twain Riverboat is an attraction, located at the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California, on which passengers embark on a scenic, 12-minute journey around the Rivers of America. Originally named Mark Twain Steamboat when the park opened in 1955, the stately, 5/8-scale stern-wheeler was the first functional riverboat to be built in the United States for fifty years. Other Disney riverboat attractions now appear at Walt Disney World, Tokyo Disneyland and Disneyland Paris.

Passengers wait for the 150-ton, 28-foot-high (8.5 m), 105-foot-long (32 m) riverboat, which departs every 25 minutes, inside a sheltered area located in the Frontierland section of the park. The waiting area is made to resemble a real riverboat loading area, with cargo deliveries sharing space on the dock. Historic United States flags are displayed at the attraction's entrance.

Upon boarding Mark Twain, passengers are free to move about her three levels. The lower deck's bow has chairs. The upper deck provides a vantage point for viewing landmarks throughout the voyage, there are also a couple bench seats on this level, some indoors and some outside.

The wheelhouse, where Mark Twain's pilot is stationed, is also located on the upper deck. The lower level of the wheelhouse features a sleeping area and a sink to maintain the illusion of this being the captain's living quarters. At the pilot's discretion, a small number of passengers may be given permission to ride in the wheelhouse for the voyage, after which they are presented with souvenir Pilot Certificates.

The pilot signals the departure and arrival of Mark Twain using a horn and bell system, along with various signals to other river craft attractions. Because the riverboat travels along an I-beam guide rail throughout the ride, the pilot does not maneuver the ship. Instead, the pilot serves as lookout for other river traffic, such as Davy Crockett's Explorer Canoes and the Rafts to Pirate's Lair on Tom Sawyer Island, and communicates his observations with the boiler engineer. The boiler engineer is stationed on the bottom deck towards the stern. This is where the throttle and reverser are located. From here, the boiler engineer controls the speed and direction of the riverboat. Steam from the boiler is used to power the paddle wheels and thus pushes the craft along its guide-way.


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