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Roller Coaster (Lagoon)

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Status
  
Operating

Type
  
Wood

Track layout
  
Double Out and Back

Height
  
19 m

Park
  
Lagoon

Opening date
  
1921 (1921)

Designer
  
John A. Miller

Lift/launch system
  
Chain lift hill

Opened
  
1921

Roller Coaster (Lagoon)

Address
  
Lagoon Amusement Park, 375 Lagoon Dr, Farmington, UT 84025, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–9:45PMTuesday10AM–9:45PMWednesday10AM–9:45PMThursday10AM–9:45PMFriday10AM–9:45PMSaturday10AM–9:45PMSunday10AM–9:45PMMonday10AM–9:45PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Cannibal, Colossus the Fire D, Wicked, Spider, Jet Star 2

Roller Coaster, often nicknamed the White Roller Coaster due to the previously white color, at Lagoon Amusement Park in Farmington, Utah, United States, is the oldest roller coaster at the park. Built in 1921 and operating ever since, Roller Coaster is the seventh oldest roller coaster in the world and the fourth oldest in the United States.

Contents

History

The Roller Coaster was designed by John A. Miller and opened in 1921. In 1953, a fire damaged the coaster and burnt down the rest of the park, meaning the station and lift hill had to be rebuilt. Over the years it has had computer upgrades and new trains installed. In 2005, it became an ACE Roller Coaster Landmark for being a classic coaster. In October 2012, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The ride has no real official name other than "Roller Coaster", so the locals often call it the White Roller Coaster. The park has recently stopped painting the ride, so it will gradually move from white to natural brown as Lagoon rebuilds a section of the ride per off-season, to help preserve Roller Coaster. However, the nickname stuck, and people continue calling it the White Roller Coaster despite it now being brown.

Layout

Roller Coaster starts with a turn out of the station and over to the lift hill where it rises 60 feet (18 m). The train then plunges down the first hill and up the next and down again around the west turn and into a several more series of hills gradually getting smaller around two more turns before returning to the station.

Accidents

A number of accidents have occurred on the Roller Coaster since its opening, though all were related to the persons' own misconduct. In 1989, a 13-year-old girl stood up and fell 35 feet to her death. She was pronounced dead at the scene. At least two more deaths have occurred over the years. In 1934, Henry Howe, 20, of Ogden, Utah fell to his death as he attempted to stand up when the train was on its highest hill. Howe hit a number of support trestles on the way down. In 1946, James Young Hess was struck by the train as he was working on scaffolding on the ride. Hess suffered skull, leg and arm fractures and internal injuries before dying on September 1, 1946.

References

Roller Coaster (Lagoon) Wikipedia