Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Lee Grimsditch

Lost Frontierland theme park was short train ride from Liverpool

1980s and '90s kids from Merseyside, and all over the north west of England, will remember the excitement of a trip to Frontierland.

The now derelict theme park in Morecambe, Lancashire, sadly closed in 2000. But many on Merseyside will have taken a trip on one of its white-knuckle rides such as the Texas Tornado, Stampede and the Haunted Silver Mine.

It wasn't until 1987 that the amusement park was given a wild west theme and renamed Frontierland. The park's history goes back much further first opening in 1906 as the West End Amusement Park, before later being renamed Fun City, then Morecambe Pleasure Park, before finally being called Frontierland.

READ MORE: Life working 'on the buses' for five decades in Merseyside

READ MORE: 20 photos capture the changing faces of England's WAGS

Rides were regularly added to the park during its 12-years of operation. In 1989, the cable car 'Sky Ride' was introduced that took visitors out of the park and over Morecambe's spectacular promenade.

In 1993, Frontierland also added the 'Polo Tower'. Originally called the 'Space Tower', the ride had been a fixture at Blackpool Pleasure Beach for over ten years but had to make way for The Big One, its now famous £12 million, 235ft tall roller coaster.

The new tower, sponsored by Polo Mints, was positioned at the front of the park resulting in a welcome boost in visitor numbers. In its heyday, the park had a number of popular rides, some of which have now been dismantled and shipped across the world, whereas others were moved to Blackpool Pleasure Beach.

Sadly, neither this nor a visit from then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who named one of the horses on the carousel after herself, in 1997, could save Frontierland. Dwindling visitor numbers saw the park shrink in 1998 as rides were sold off, before it officially closed in 2000.

Former Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher next a carousel horse named Maggie while on a campaigning visit to Frontierland, Morecambe. 22/4/1997 (PA)

Now the site of the former Wild West theme park is finally set to be reused after being abandoned for more than 20-years. Lancaster City Council has bought the site that used to be home to the park, saying it intends to use the land to 'help drive the reinvention of the town'.

So as a the final remnants of the park are erased, we've decided to remind ourselves of some of Frontierland's classic rides that brought joy to kids from Merseyside for many years.

Texas Tornado (formerly Cyclone)

Cyclone rollercoaster later renamed Texas Tornado at Frontierland, Morecambe (Pete Andrews | ukrides.info)

The 3,000ft long coaster was renamed Texas Tornado in 1987 after the entire park received a western theme. Sadly it was demolished in 2000 after 60 years at the theme park.

A rare wooden roller coaster built by the legendary designer Harry Traver, using materials from another roller coaster at the 1937 Paris Exhibition to save on construction costs.

Runaway Mine Train

King Solomon's Mines ride at Southport Pleasureland was previously known as the Runaway Mine Train at Frontierland, Morecambe (By Inferno Insane - https://www.flickr.com/photos/46538531@N00/928786892/, CC-BY-NC-ND, https://coasterpedia.net/w/index.php?curid=45961)

Another rarity, this wooden single car ride with tight turns opened to visitors in the park in 1961. Known as a Wild Mouse ride, the front of the car travels past the turn before quickly changing direction, giving the sensation that the car will career off the track.

For more nostalgia stories, sign up to our Liverpool Echo newsletter here.

The ride moved to Southport Pleasureland in 2000 and was renamed as King Solomon's Mines. The ride is now thought to be in storage at Dreamland in Margate.

Log Flume

Log Flume at Frontierland in Morecambe (By Christian Solar - https://www.solars.de/cgi-bin/p.pl/parks/altegalerie/frontierland.html, CC-BY-SA, https://coasterpedia.net/w/index.php?curid=30656)

The ever-popular Log Flume opened in 1982, and despite the park’s closure in 2000, remained on site until 2009, making it a magnet for urban explorers.

Polo Tower

Polo Tower and The Ranch House, Frontierland Western Theme Park, Morecambe (Rober Wade (Wadey) | Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0))

The Polo Tower, sponsored by the confectionery of the same name, was originally known as the Space Tower and was built at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in 1974. It was moved in 1993 to make way for the Big One roller coaster and rebuilt at Frontierland in 1993, opening to the public in 1994.

Does Frontierland awaken any memories for you? Let us know in the comments section below.

It survived until 2017, although the cabin was removed in 2008, because a mobile phone company had a transmitter on top of it, and the contract ran until 2013.

Haunted Silver Mine

The Haunted Silver Mine at Frontierland, Morecambe, was a ghost train style ride (By Christian Solar - https://www.solars.de/cgi-bin/p.pl/parks/altegalerie/frontierland.html, CC-BY-SA, https://coasterpedia.net/w/index.php?curid=30655)

The Haunted Silver Mine was ghost train ride that opened in 1987 and closed in 1998. The ride was originally known as Scream Machine when it first started operating in 1978, although it soon changed its name to Star Treker.

Join our Liverpool memories and history Facebook group here.

The ride was given a western mine theme when the park changed its name to Frontierland. The ride was removed in 2000 when the park closed.

Stampede

Cyclone at Blackpool would eventually be known as Stampede in Frontierland at Morecambe (By From Flickr., CC-BY-NC-ND, https://coasterpedia.net/w/index.php?curid=7537)

Stampede was a steel roller coaster that originally opened as Cyclone at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in 1974. It was relocated to Frontierland in 1987 and operated until 1998.

The coaster has since operated at Canvey Island Amusement Park and Killarney Springs Family Park. It's not known where Stampede is now.

Noah's Ark

The Noahs Ark at Frontierland Western Theme Park, Morecambe, Lancashire in 1998 (The crypt | Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0))

This classic funhouse attraction was sadly demolished when the park closed in 2000. One of the oldest rides at the park, it first appeared in the 1920s.

The Rattler

The Big Apple ride at Blackpool Pleasure Beach was once known as The Rattler at Frontierland in Morecambe (Joyland Books/Gary Radice)

The Rattler was a classic family friendly roller coaster known as a wacky worm ride. It had the face and body of a giant caterpillar made up of six single train cars.

The ride was later removed from the park and put into storage until 2004 when it made a second debut at Blackpool Pleasure Beach called Big Apple - but it only stayed there for one season. It's now thought the ride is at Fun Land in Towyn, Wales.

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.