NorumbegaPark.com

Cherishing the memory of New England's most popular amusement park

About the author of the below text:

Robert F. Pollock was by far the biggest fan, and  probably the biggest advocate and historian of Norumbega Park. I was  fortunate enough to view Bobs first production, Down By The Riverside in the early nineties. Sadly, Bob Pollock passed away on September 1, 2004, just prior to the completion of his second production Return To Norumbega. As a teenager in the late 1950's, he worked along the Midway. He wrote an extensive 300+ page history as well as numerous newspaper and magazine articles about Norumbega Park and the Totem Pole Ballroom. He was seen on Chronicle and PBS relating the history of the  park and for many years gave slide shows throughout New England,  expanding his information to include the Charles River.

The Park:
Norumbega Park opened in  June of 1897 in the Auburndale section of Newton, Massachusetts. The  amusement park was built by the directors of the Commonwealth Avenue  Street Railway in an attempt to increase patronage and revenues on the  trolley line running between Boston and Auburndale. The park's name was  taken from Norumbega Tower, a huge stone structure located across the  river in Weston, built to honor the Viking explorers who had sailed up  the Charles River around 1000 AD. When Norumbega Park first opened at  "Auburndale-on-the-Charles," it featured canoing, picnic areas, an  outdoor theater, a penny arcade, a restaurant, a zoo, a carousel, and an electric fountain. The parks Pavilion Restaurant was managed by Joseph Lee, a noted chef who had been born a slave near Charlestown, South  Carolina in the 1850’s. Lee, also a very successful inventor, had owned  and operated the exclusive Woodland Park Hotel in Auburndale before  taking over the Norumbega restaurant.

Norumbega was tremendously successful, attracting  hundreds of thousands of patrons each season. Its location on the  Charles River meant that the park was accessible by water as well as by  land. In the early years of the twentieth century, the Lakes District of the Charles was the most heavily canoed stretch of water on earth, with more than 5000 canoes berthed along its 5.8 mile length. Norumbega,  along with the Riverside Recreation Grounds in Weston and more than a  dozen other local recreational facilities in Newton and Waltham, became  famous for recreation, competition, romance and fun. People from all  walks of life came to the riverside via steam trains and electric  trolleys. By the 1905 season, the outdoor theater at Norumbega had given way to an enclosed facility. The beautiful new theater featured  topnotch vaudeville entertainment, musical plays, comedies, and  melodramas, as well as Mr. Edison's "moving pictures" shown on a device called a Komograph. The Great Steel Theater at Norumbega was the largest theater in New England, and the park’s zoo was also the largest in the  six-state region.

Norumbega’s success continued through the 1920s, with new attractions added frequently. Rides included the Caterpillar, the  Bug, Dodgem Cars, Custer Cars, Seaplanes, and a huge Ferris wheel. In  1930, buses replaced the trolleys that ran along Commonwealth Avenue.  Also in 1930, the Great Steel Theater at Norumbega was converted into  the Totem Pole Ballroom. From the day it first opened, the Totem Pole  was something special. More than a hundred ballrooms were advertising in the Boston newspapers, but the Totem Pole was generally acknowledged as the best and the most elegant. Virtually every famous swing band in the country appeared at the Auburndale venue, including Benny Goodman,  Artie Shaw, Harry James, the Dorsey brothers, Lawrence Welk and Ozzie  Nelson. Frank Sinatra sang at the Totem Pole, as did Dinah Shore,  Frankie Laine, the Four Lads and the von Trapp Family. Music from the  ballroom was broadcast nationally over the NBC, ABC, and CBS radio  networks.

The park and ballroom successfully co-existed for  decades. Young lovers danced the night away at the Totem Pole, pausing  only to flirt and cuddle in Norumbega's cozy nooks and lush gardens.  Canoes and pedal boats dotted the river, and the rides, penny arcade and refreshment stands bustled with activity. During World War II, a US  Army Ordnance company was stationed at the Norumbega restaurant. Roy  Gill, owner of the park, organized numerous war bond promotions, scrap  metal drives and charity events.

The parks ball field was home to a womens professional softball team, the Totem Pole Belles.

Norumbega and the Totem Pole began a long, slow  decline after the war years. Millions of automobiles, along with new and better roads, signaled the end of many local amusement parks. Families  were more likely to travel to the mountains or the seashore on summer  weekends. Amusement parks across the country, many of which had been  built in the last century, were beginning to show their age. Huge theme  parks like Disneyland were on the horizon. Norumbega's gates closed  forever on Labor Day, 1963. The Totem Pole closed a few months later, on February 8, 1964.

Today the Norumbega land is the site of a large and  successful hotel. East of the hotels parking lot is an area of  approximately ten acres owned by the City of Newton ?the Norumbega Park  Conservation Land. But there are still thousands of old-timers from  across southern New England who recall with affection and nostalgia what used to be one of the most exciting spots in the world - Norumbega  Park! 

 Authorized seller of Remember Productions Return To Norumbega

 

Norumbegepark.com 2005-2011

Norumbega Park, Auburndale Massachusetts