Community Corner
New Freedomland U.S.A. Book Features Ties To Long Island
Animals, flora, fauna, shop owners and character actors connected to Bronx theme park.

Freedomland U.S.A.: More Definitive History, the latest offering from Theme Park Press (available on Amazon, Barnes&Noble and other online retailers), continues the intriguing narrative about one of the most innovative and beloved entertainment venues in the country. This new book about America’s theme park places the spotlights on a trove of recently found documents and other resources along with remembrances shared by more than one hundred employees and park guests.
Though located in the Bronx, the park enjoyed a fair amount of connections to Long Island. These included the purchase of a deer from Suffolk County and landscape contributions from a nursery in Nassau County, character actors who lived or performed here, shop owners with ties to the area and a retirement home at Loughlin Vineyard of Sayville for a park mule once Freedomland closed its gates.
_______
Find out what's happening in Long Islandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
A presentation with a memorabilia display is available for libraries, historical societies, religious, civic and other organizations. Email Freedomlandusa@yahoo.com . Find Freedomland on Facebook, Instagram, X/Twitter and Pinterest.
_______
Find out what's happening in Long Islandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Freedomland lasted only five years (1960-1964). The park to this day continues to generate fond memories among boomers who enjoyed the 85-acre playground with family and friends along with many others who are captivated by its brief but vital role on the theme park timeline.
Broadway, NY Television, Hollywood And Disney
Freedomland was conceived and built by C.V. Wood and his Marco Engineering Company. Wood was Disneyland’s first employee and he brought Walt Disney’s imagination to life by leading the team that built the California park. He then created Marco Engineering to build theme parks and other venues across the country. Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington and the community of Lake Havasu, Arizona, continue to prosper. Former Disney employees, Hollywood and Broadway creative personnel, and talent from New York City television contributed to the creation of Freedomland. Unknown to Wood and Freedomland’s fans, Bronx landowner William Zeckendorf, Sr., local politicians, city planners and construction unions considered the park a temporary occupant of the property until land variances permitted significant development of the marshland for housing (Co-op City) and shopping.
The previous book, Freedomland U.S.A.: The Definitive History (Theme Park Press, 2018), was believed to have documented much of the available Freedomland story from conception to bankruptcy. Official park records had been lost for 50 years and, with a few exceptions, all significant park, vendor and sponsor executives had been deceased for decades. However, following the publication of the first Freedomland book, many employees and the children of employees shared their memories and previously unknown stories. The conversations generated many interesting and significant questions that required further examination as have hundreds of family photographs and home movies along with three recently located photo archives with more than 3,500 images by park photographers. Freedomland documents in museum archives have been located in Connecticut, Delaware, New York and California.
The first Freedomland book now serves as a prerequisite to the new volume. Freedomland U.S.A.: More Definitive History reprises the roles of people mentioned in the first volume while introducing others associated with the park to further explain the many elements of the Freedomland story. Several corrections of previous assumptions and a few minor errors that appear in the earlier book are attributed to new revelations. The new book also identifies the likely source of the park’s name and the first location of park offices in the Bronx.