Yankee Cannonball | |
---|---|
Canobie Lake Park | |
Coordinates | 42°47′43″N 71°14′57″W / 42.79527°N 71.24922°WCoordinates: 42°47′43″N 71°14′57″W / 42.79527°N 71.24922°W |
Status | Operating |
Opening date | 1930 |
General statistics | |
Type | Wood – Out and back |
Manufacturer | Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters |
Designer | Herbert Paul Schmeck |
Lift/launch system | Chainlift |
Height | 19.8 m (65 ft) |
Drop | 19.4 m (64 ft) |
Length | 609.6 m (2,000 ft) |
Speed | 56.3 km/h (35.0 mph) |
Yankee Cannonball at RCDB Pictures of Yankee Cannonball at RCDB |
The Yankee Cannonball is a wooden out-and-back roller coaster built in 1930 at Lakewood Park and relocated in 1936 to Canobie Lake Park, Salem, New Hampshire.
The roller coaster was designed by Herbert Paul Schmeck of the Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters. Its serial number is 86. In 1930, it was installed under the name "Roller Coaster" at Lakewood Park in Waterbury, Connecticut. Frank F. Hoover oversaw the construction. The coaster operated in Connecticut for only five years before being closed and moved to Canobie Lake Park. It was rechristened the "Yankee Cannonball" in 1935, in commemoration of the American Civil War. The coaster's train colors were originally blue and gray, representing the Union and Confederacy sides of the conflict, all being united on the ride's red, white, and blue superstructure.
When the ride was moved to Canobie in 1936, each section was shortened by six inches to help it fit the area planned for it. The rethemed ride opened for the 1936 season and has operated continuously since, though the lift hill was destroyed by Hurricane Carol in 1954, and it was closed for repair during the following season.
The coaster's coloring has been altered since 1936 with retracking work done on the coaster. Some of this retracking was completed by Martin & Vleminckx. As of the 2009 season, the ride superstructure is white with orange handrails. One train is colored red, white and blue, while the other is hunter green and orange. The coaster is one of the first rides seen when entering the park's parking lot.
The ride's layout is an out and back pattern with a 90° turn in the middle, creating the basic L-shape common in early wooden coasters. The primary elements include small hills designed to give moments of airtime and strongly banked turns. Restraints on the trains used to consist of a single lap bar with no seat belts allowing single riders to slide across the seat, making full use of the banked turns. Seat belts and center seat dividers were later added. Once the site of an infield, the area inside the L-shape is now employee parking for the park.