The Original |
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For the first eight months or so after the Magic Kingdom's opening, the Walt Disney World Railroad had only one station serving park guests. During that time, a "grand circle trip" was mandatory unless you jumped off the train when no one else was looking. Having parted with a D ticket to board, most guests preferred to stay put. As they rode through Frontierland they passed by a wooden shack and water tower that marked the future location of the line's next depot.
Right around May 1972, the Frontierland Railroad Station opened a few feet northwest of the Pecos Bill Cafe. It marked the westernmost point of Frontierland for nearly nineteen years, stealthily weathering extensive development in the surrounding vicinity. It also provided the only alternate point for boarding or disembarking the trains until 1988, when a third station opened in what was then called Mickey's Birthdayland. The old Frontierland station was a slight bit of
architecture with a toy-like look - owing in part to the
gingerbread molding on its rooflines. Most guests
accessed the station by ascending steps that raised them
about five feet above Frontierland street level.
Wheelchair guests entered along a winding exit pathway
connecting with the north end of the structure. The
building's interior consisted of a single open-air room in
which a short series of benches accommodated guests
waiting for the next train. A set of posters on the walls
perpetually denoted that the service was "on
schedule." Plenty of hatchets and red water barrels
marked "Fire Only" were on hand in the event of
incendiary outbursts. |
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Frontierland Extinct WDW Attraction Component Located in: Opened: c. February 1972 Descendant of: Influences evident in:
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Just north of the railroad station was a vast expanse of grass sandwiched between
the train tracks and the Rivers of America. This land, dotted with pine trees and a few
totem poles, was for several years the intended location of the Western River
Expedition. When plans for that attraction fell through, the northern part of the land
became the site for Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, which opened in 1980. The
grassy plain between Thunder Mountain and the Frontierland station remained
untouched for a seeming eternity. Its sole functioning occupant was the twisting
roadway that allowed the Kingdom's parades an exit from the park.
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