Tiny Town, Colorado
History
George Turner, owner of Denver business Turner Moving & Storage and a friend of Buffalo Bill Cody, began building a miniature town for his daughter in 1915. Called Turnerville, he opened the site to the public in 1921.
Turnerville quickly became one of the state's most popular attractions, but it was plagued by damage from adjacent Turkey Creek flooding and a fire burned down the Indian pueblo in 1935. The train was added in 1939 and the name became Tiny Town.
On August 11, 2010 fifteen people were injured as a train entered a curve at the park going between 12 and 17 miles per hour (19 and 27 km/h), causing five of the six cars to tip over. An investigation determined the operator was not adequately trained in steam locomotive operation which resulted in confusion of the brake and throttle levers. The state fined Tiny Town $30,500 consisting of $1000 per incident the operator operated the train and $500 for not having documented training of emergency and safety procedures.
See also
References
- ^ Moore, Paula (2002-08-16). "Tourists escape to local amusement venues". Denver Business Journal. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
- ^ Billings, Hankd (2006-07-03). "Tiny Town attracts big interest". News-Leader (Springfield, MO). Archived from the original on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
- ^ "State Fines Tiny Town $30,500 In Train Accident". 7News. 2010-08-20.
Further reading
- Black, Carla (1990). Tiny Town, From Tragedy to Triumph. Boulder, CO: F. Pruett. ISBN 0-9623868-2-0. OCLC 21958210.
- Brooks, Alice Jeanne; Demaris Martindale Madsen (1989). Tiny Town, Boom or Bust. Morrison, CO: Wildflower Press. OCLC 21867018.
External links
- Tiny Town & Railroad official site