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In Upstate New York, the Music Goes Round and Round


05 May 2008
Landphair report - Download (MP3) audio clip
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The menagerie carousel in Burlington, N.C., built about 1910 and restored in the 1980s, features carved cats, pigs, ostriches, a reindeer, a giraffe, and these hares
The menagerie carousel in Burlington, N.C., built about 1910 and restored in the 1980s, features carved cats, pigs, ostriches, a reindeer, a giraffe, and these hares
Frenchmen of the 17th century played a game called carrousel, in which riders on horseback speared rings with their lances. Early-American children rode wooden horses called whirligigs, suspended from a revolving wheel. Then in 1866, a Pennsylvania cabinetmaker placed these horses on a rotating platform, turned by mules that plodded around a center pole.

The carousel, or merry-go-round, was born. Right now, in communities across the United States, magical whirling carousels of decorated wooden animals, blinking lights, and tinkly calliope music are being oiled and polished for another long summer of family fun.

Every beautiful, polished wooden horse on the six Broome County carousels is a jumper — gliding up and down.  Each merry-go-round also includes hand-painted panels
Every beautiful, polished wooden horse on the six Broome County carousels is a jumper – gliding up and down.  Each merry-go-round also includes hand-painted panels
And perhaps the most idyllic examples of carousels are in Broome County, New York, which includes the city of Binghamton. It was there that a fellow named Allan Herschell began to manufacture steam-powered galleries, as he called his elaborate carousels. Soon, he was shipping one per day to carnivals and beach resorts as far away as the South Pacific island of Tahiti, where the steam was produced by burning coconuts.

Carousels - and their vertical cousins, Ferris wheels - are staples of fairs and carnivals.  This one whirled in 1940 at the Cotton Carnival in Memphis, Tennessee
Carousels – and their vertical cousins, Ferris wheels – are staples of fairs and carnivals.  This one whirled in 1940 at the Cotton Carnival in Memphis, Tennessee
Of Herschell's thousands of hand-carved carousels, only 19 are known to survive, and six are in the Binghamton area. Every horse on a Herschell carousel is what's called a jumper, meaning it rises and falls on a pole as the merry-go-round revolves. The romance side of each horse – that is, the side that's lavishly decorated with extra glass jewels and carved ribbons – faces outward to the crowd, where parents watch their children riding the wooden steeds. Some carousels also include other lavishly carved animals like ostriches and zebras and giraffes.

These days in Broome County, the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the youngsters who first took a ride are lining up for a turn in the very same saddles.

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