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hances
are, if you rode the Merry-Go-Round at Eldridge, you heard Tom Burhyte
working there. "Heard" is the operative word here, because
he was the person who rang the bell. Two quick dings and then a
pause and then another ding to get the thing started. And then three
or four minutes later, just before it stopped, another ding, just
to let everybody know the ride was about to end. Remember that?
Tom's
is a wonderful story about a young boy learning the amusement ride
business. It's about the years he spent at Eldridge working for
the proprietors of some of the Park's rides and midway attractions,
a story about dedication and loyalty. And it's a story of how the
Park got "into his blood." In all, he worked over 20 years
at Eldridge - well into his adult years - and he spent many of his
youthful and formative moments with the "Eldridge Greats"
like Bob Long and Herb Randall.
This is
how he tells that story:
"A
day at the park started at about seven in the morning and went a
lot of times past midnight seven days a week in the summer. I remember
when I first started working there we would sweep the whole park
with just brooms. Twenty people and some times more. We finally
got power vacs in the late Fifties, and, boy, what a break that
was !!!!!
"Mechanic
work was the big thing at the park: fixing broken Scooter Cars,
changing motors in them, replacing the bands around their bottoms,
sanding the rust off the metal floor once a week. Fixing broken
Spooks House cars, fixing the scary things, cleaning the grease
off the track so it could make good contact, welding broken parts
if they could be welded at all."
Tom has
fond memories of Bob Long and Herb Randall:
"Working
for Bob Long was the best thing that ever happened to me. I started
when I was fourteen. Got the job thru Herb Randall, another park
employee that I worked for, who lived just up the street from me
and was just like a father to me. We did everything together and
for some reason he thought I had Park Blood in me, which I found
out later was true.
"As
far as Bob Long goes, you couldn't ask for a better person to work
for. He would give you the shirt off his back if you needed it and
then more. He was always there for his helpers and was concerned
about them 100 percent. If you had a problem, he would stop what
he was doing, and sit down right there with you and give you his
insight on what was wrong and how to solve it. I saw people who
lost their driver's license, and he would make a phone call. They'd
have their license back within a week's time or sooner.
"Bob
and Herb taught me how to paint the horses in the winter, take motors
apart, weld, carpenter work, carving, rigging, electric. I left
the park in 1970 and told Bob that if he needed anything from me
to just give me a call."
It was the
Flood of 72, a disaster that devasted Elmira and the Park, that
brought Tom back to Eldridge.
"One
day Bob Long took me up on my offer. When the 1972 flood hit I was
working in Syracuse. He called me and told me we were going to get
flooded real bad at the park. That's was all I had to hear and I
was on my way home to help out. We got all the horses up so the
water couldn't get to them (we thought). We had to do that just
about every spring anyway because of flooding. I went home to eat
supper and got to thinking maybe I ought to go back down and check
things out one last time. I called Walt Kowalski, a friend and also
a Merry-Go-Round employee, and took my eleven-year-old son with
me. We met over on Grand Central Ave. and walked in from there.
"We
waded through water up to our knees and went straight to the Merry-Go-Round
to get the stereo and amplifiers up just another foot or so to save
them. Then we then went next door to the Spooks House and made sure
it was all right over there. We had the cars up on picnic tables
and the water wasn't there yet so we thought it was pretty safe
there.
"From
there we went to the scooter car ride and all of a sudden we had
a cloud burst and you couldn't see past the outside overhang. It
was just like being underneath Niagara Falls. It couldn't have been
ten minutes and the water started coming in like a dam broke. We
tried to get the scooter cars up on the railing. Walt and I could
pick the front end up but my son Tommy couldn't push it up so we
put the motor end up on the bumper cars to try to save them.
"I
never saw water come so fast in all my life like it did that night.
We pretty nearly had to swim to get out of there. The very next
day Walt and I were back down there at six o'clock in the morning
hosing things down as the water receded. We had everything cleaned
up by noon.
"But the Merry-Go-Round horses were doomed - some had two inch
gaps where they came unglued. Bob said to me, "Tommy we got
to get this place up and going,' and that's what we did. 1973 was
the last time i worked there and that was the last time the Merry-Go-Round
was painted as far as I know. I had twenty years there full and
part time and was the time of my life, and, to this day, I still
have Park Blood in me. You either do or you don't and you might
say I was one of the lucky ones to have worked at Eldridge Park."
Tom Burhyte
has been involved in the recent restoration of the Carousel at Eldridge.
The original bell that Tom used to ring was located but wasn't available
and so Bob Lyon, Eldridge Park Carousel Preservation Society founder
and President, found one almost like it on E-Bay. It's 10 inches
where the original was a 14-inch bell. Tom built a stand for it
to make it look as close to the original as possible.
Bob Lyon
asked Tom to build the stand for the new bell. He completed and
painted it and decided to take it down to the park and install it
when no one was around. Tom's memories of the bell and his many
years at the park had welled up inside of him and he wasn't sure
if he'd be able to keep his composure. He tells it this way:
"I'm
really glad I went to the park alone, because when I put the bell
in position where the old one used to be I got a chill. Surprised,
I just sat there for twenty minutes or so. I closed my eyes, rang
the bell and it just seemed as though I could hear the sound that
the jumper horses used to make. And that's when I got really teary
eyed.
"As
I sat there with my eyes still closed, I could just about see the
people I worked with those many years ago. There was Herb Randall.
I could see his wife Gerry selling tickets and all the people riding
the Merry-Go Round. No one in this world could imagine what went
thru my mind when I was down there with that new bell at Eldridge
Park doing my thing, so to speak.
"The
Merry-Go Round will be restored to mint condition if I have anything
to do with this project. And the bell is part of that! My special
thanks to Bob Lyon for letting me relive a part of my life all over
again, working at Eldridge Park! "
To
find more memories like this one of Eldridge Park,
please visit The
Eldridge Park Home Page
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