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"path": "/places/glen-echo-park-carousel",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-22T14:30:00.000Z",
"site": "https://www.atlasobscura.com",
"tags": [
"civil rights",
"carousels"
],
"textContent": "In 1891, the National Chautauqua Assembly established Glen Echo Park, just outside of Washington, DC, as a school for liberal arts and sciences, an endeavor that lasted only one year. By the early 1900s, the site had become Glen Echo Amusement Park, catering to the Capital’s pleasure seekers. Although the amusement park rides are long gone, Glen Echo Park still operates its iconic Dentzel Carousel—a lasting reminder of the park’s vibrant history.\n\nToday, Glen Echo Park’s century-old Carousel stands as one of the world’s oldest merry-go-rounds, still in operation and at its original location. Constructed by the Dentzel Carousel Company of Germantown, Pennsylvania, in 1921, it attracts more than 50,000 visitors each year and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.\n\nClassified as a “menagerie carousel” due to its number and variety of animals, the Carousel features 52 hand-carved wooden animals and two circus chariots. Its menagerie includes 40 horses, several rabbits and ostriches, a lion, a tiger, a giraffe, and a deer. It spins at a relatively speedy five turns per minute to the accompaniment of a 105-year-old Wurlitzer organ. In 1983, Rosa Patton began a 24-year restoration of the Carousel, returning its animals, organ, canopy building, and floor to their original paint colors. The restoration was completed in 2003, ensuring that its original charm would endure for future generations.\n\nThe Carousel also became a symbol of social change. During the summer of 1960, it was the site of protests in the American Civil Rights Movement. On June 30, 1960, black students from Howard University in Washington, DC, boarded the Carousel in defiance of the Park’s segregation policies. When confronted by Park security, the students refused to leave, prompting the operator to stop the ride. After two and 1/2 hours, five students were arrested for “criminal trespass.” Protests continued at and around the Park throughout the rest of the summer. When the Park reopened for the 1961 season, it was desegregated.\n\nThe events at Glen Echo set the stage for legal change. They culminated in the landmark 1964 Supreme Court decision, Griffin v. Maryland, in which the Court ruled that the arrests of Black patrons by a state-commissioned deputy sheriff, albeit working as a security guard at a private establishment, constituted state-enforced segregation violating the 14th Amendment. This case, along with others, set an important legal precedent for the Civil Rights Act of 1964.",
"title": "Glen Echo Park Carousel in Glen Echo, Maryland"
}