The story of the most dangerous amusement park in the world: "It was tolerated to die as a game"

During its heyday in the 1980s and 1990s, New Jersey's Action Park earned a reputation as the stupidest and most dangerous amusement park that ever existed.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
01 April 2023 Saturday 10:25
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The story of the most dangerous amusement park in the world: "It was tolerated to die as a game"

During its heyday in the 1980s and 1990s, New Jersey's Action Park earned a reputation as the stupidest and most dangerous amusement park that ever existed.

The park, which opened in 1978, was known as lawless territory, run by drunken teenage employees and frequented by even more drunken teenage patrons.

With slides that defy physics and rides that encourage risky behavior, injuries at the park were a daily occurrence, according to former employees.

"Class Action Park" is an HBO documentary created, in large part, by interviewing former employees and visitors who recall, with great nostalgia, the wild fun and extreme danger of the park.

Most of the youngsters who came to this amusement park came away with cuts, burns, and concussions that caused them temporary pain. However, several died.

The park was designed and managed in accordance with two of founder Gene Mulvihill's core beliefs: people should have the right to have unlimited fun and adventure, and they should take responsibility for their own safety.

Mulvihill, a former Wall Street stockbroker, did not believe in insurance and dragged out lawsuits against the park, of which there were more than a hundred, refusing to settle. In addition, Mulvihill engaged in many illegal financial activities.)

The danger, according to Mulvihill, was part of the fun, and when employees suggested safety measures to reduce risk, the owner flatly rejected them.

"Action Park was a place where death was tolerated as a game," says Esther Larsson, whose 19-year-old son George died in 1980 after riding the park's alpine slide.

With a sled, the riders traversed the steep concrete track with a cane that often broke. The attraction was so dangerous that, according to the documentary, photos of bloody users greeted people at the top.

Other victims drowned in an attraction called the Tidal Wave Pool, nicknamed the "grave pool," which featured a "death zone" manned by a lifeguard in the "death chair," according to the documentary.

During the kayak experience, a man died after falling out of his canoe and being electrocuted by an "underground electrical system" malfunction.

A company called Great American Recreation owned the park, and its creator, Eugene Mulvihill, was an unusual businessman who gave form to its "anything goes" ethos and modified the rides while they were under construction to make them " more dangerous".

Mulvihill, known as "Uncle Gene" to his young employees, designed one of the park's deadliest rides: the Cannonball Loop, which broke teeth and caused cuts, drawing "a circle on a cocktail napkin" and "hiring local welders to get ridden," according to Class Action Park.

After various lawsuits and complications, the park finally closed in 1996.