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A
Grand Carousel
PTC#30,
the thirtieth machine made by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company
(PTC) in Pennsylvania, USA, was built in 1913. The carousel was
specially ordered by entrepreneur, Cozens Spencer, for his new,
White City amusement park in Sydney, Australia. In 1913 it cost
him US$14,657.00 plus shipping! Like
a giant puzzle, the huge carousel, complete with cast iron machinery
and hundreds of timber parts, set sail from America in October,
1913 and arrived in Sydney in November. Ten years later PTC#30 came
to Melbourne for the grand re-opening of Luna Park in 1923. This
was the carousel's second location where it has remained ever since
and is fondly remembered by generations of Melburnians.
The
carousel was one of PTC's "high class" rides, a grand
machine designed for a permanent location. With a platform 52 feet
in diameter, it still has the original 68 horses four abreast, 2
Roman chariots, elaborate decoration and 36 cherubs frozen in flight
on the rounding boards. 26 original scenery paintings adorn the
center panels and rounding boards, painted by PTC's Max Soltmann.
During the recent restoration of PTC#30, it was discovered that
much of the original paint was in tact on the majority of horses,
rounding boards and center panels. Company ledgers confirm that
much of this work was done by PTC's head painter of 30 years, Gustav
Weiss.
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Swords
and Flowers
PTC#30
is almost identical in design to the four and five row machines
PTC# 20, 21 and 22, made between1911 and 1912. These carousels and
#30 shared the romantic theme "War and Peace" which allowed skilled
PTC carvers great scope for creative invention and individuality
in horse carving. Armour, swords and shields adorn the dark, spirited
horses following the eagle chariot of War on PTC#30. The Peace chariot
is more serene with a "Columbia" figurehead surrounded
by carved flowers. She is followed by gentler horses with arched
necks and softer colours. Lyrical flowers and butterflies are typical
of PTC's romantic style and are liberally scattered around PTC#30.
Most
PTC carousels had a lead horse, usually the most magnificently carved
and often armoured like a medieval knight's steed. PTC#30's
golden lead horse embodies
both war and peace with it's war helmet and gentle angel. Of the
68 horses on PTC#30, 66 are jumpers (moving up and down) and 2 are
standers (stationary on the platform). They were identified as "king
horses" by the company on the 1913 assembly plans that accompanied
the carousel to Australia.
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