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Disneyland's History
One day Walt Disney had a vision. It was a vision of
a place where children and parents could have fun
together. The more Walt dreamed of a "magical park,"
the more imaginative and elaborate it became.
The original plans for the park were on 8 acres next
to the Burbank studios where his employees and
families could go to relax. Although, World War II
put those plans on hold. During the war, Walt had
time to come up with new ideas, and creations for
his magical park. It was soon clear that 8 acres
wouldn't be enough.
Finally in 1953, he had the Stanford Research
Institute conduct a survey for a 100-acre site,
outside of Los Angeles. He needed space to build
rivers, waterfalls, and mountains; he would have
flying elephants and giant tea cups a fairy-tale
castle, moon rockets, and a scenic railway; all
inside a magic kingdom he called "Disneyland."
Location was a top priority. The property would have
to be within the Los Angeles metropolitan area, and
accessible by freeway. It would also have to be
affordable: Walt's pockets were only so deep.
The search for the best spot finally ended in the
rural Anaheim, California with a purchase of a
160-acre orange grove near the junction of the Santa
Ana Freeway (I-5) and Harbor Boulevard
Construction for Disneyland began on July 21, 1954,
a meager 12 months before the park was scheduled to
open. From that day forward Walt Disney's life would
never be the same.
Some 160-acres of citrus trees had been cleared and
15 houses moved to make room for the park. The area
was in semi-rural Orange County, near a freeway that
would eventually stretch from San Diego to
Vancouver.
When the real designing came around, Walt was met
with inevitable questions. How do you make
believable wild animals, that aren't real? How do
you make a Mississippi paddle ship? How do you go
about building a huge castle in the middle of
Anaheim, California? So, Walt Disney looked to his
movie studio staff for the answers. The design of
Disneyland was something never done before. There
would be five uniquely different lands
Bit by bit, Disneyland got ready for Opening Day.
The staff worked around the clock to get ready. The
Mark Twain was being moved, deck by deck, down the
Santa Ana freeway to get to Disneyland on time.
Finally, everything seemed to come together. The
"magical little park" was really a $17,000,000
"Magic Kingdom." Walt's dream had come true and
Disneyland was ready to open."

Walt Disney was 53 when he dedicated Disneyland
Park. It was a memorable ceremony. There in Town
Square, Walt could look around and see the
fulfillment of his hopes, dreams, and ambitions in
the form of a spectacular entertainment kingdom.
50 Million visitors had come through the gates.
Even though Walt Disney wasn't able to see how his
park and his company prospered and grew into the
21st Century, his legacy still lives on with us.
Throughout Disneyland and throughout the entire
world, he will always be there.
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