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Baby Show Day - Steeplechase Island, (Pleasure Beach) Bridgeport Connecticut Post Card Reproduction - Framed Gray Wax Finish Shadowbox - 20-1/4-in

Baby Show Day - Steeplechase Island, (Pleasure Beach) Bridgeport Connecticut Post Card Reproduction - Framed Gray Wax Finish Shadowbox - 20-1/4-in

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Regular price $ 125.00
Regular price Sale price $ 125.00
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Product Features
  • This reproduction of a vintage post card dates back to approximately 1911. 
  • Image presents a southward view of the boardwalk crowded with people attired in fancy dress clothes for Baby Show Day in 1911.  The building on the left housed the carousel, which must have been very busy on this day.
  • Shadowbox framed in gray wax reclaimed wood 
  • Measures approximately 20-1/4-in H x 12-1/2-in W
  • Note: frames are constructed of reclaimed wood and each frame will vary in color and texture. Expect imperfections in the wood as this is the natural characteristic of reclaimed material and adds a historical element to the piece.
  • Other frame finishes are available to be ordered - and if you have a location that is meaningful, let us know!  We can show you some vintage postcard or map options of your favorite destinations.

When Bridgeport annexed the borough of West Stratford in 1889, the acquisition came with a a small 37-acre parcel of land on a barrier island at the mouth of Bridgeport Harbor. The island, thanks to its promotion as a mysterious site tied to pirate folklore, became a popular tourist destination. It eventually became an amusement park known as Steeplechase Island and the Bridgeport portion is still remembered today by it later name, Pleasure Beach.

In 1905, George C. Tilyou, owner of Steeplechase Park on Coney Island bought the small park in Bridgeport. It received the name Steeplechase Island for its carousel-style horse ride that raced visitors down a metal track as if they were steeplechase participants.

Just two years after Tilyou’s purchase, the island played host to an exhibition baseball game in which a fan carelessly dropped a lighted match into some dry grass under the stadium’s bleachers. The resulting fire tore through the grandstand, the earthquake house, and the steeplechase ride. By the time the park’s manager, Paul Boynton, extinguished the flames by igniting three charges of dynamite the park had suffered $60,000 worth of damage.

Read more about the history HERE