N
| Park | Canobie Lake Park |
| Opened | 1991 |
| Closed | |
| Designed by | |
| Built by | Zamperla |
| Type | Steel,Family |
| Length, Drop, Speed | \’, \’, mph |
| Modifications | |
| Other |
*Relocations:
Deno\’s Wonder Wheel Amusement Park as Dragon
N
| Park | Canobie Lake Park |
| Opened | 1991 |
| Closed | |
| Designed by | |
| Built by | Zamperla |
| Type | Steel,Family |
| Length, Drop, Speed | \’, \’, mph |
| Modifications | |
| Other |
*Relocations:
Deno\’s Wonder Wheel Amusement Park as Dragon
| Park | Canobie Lake Park |
| Opened | 1987 |
| Closed | |
| Designed by | |
| Built by | Arrow Dynamics |
| Type | Corkscrew |
| Length, Drop, Speed | \’, \’, mph |
| Modifications | |
| Other |
*Relocations:
Old Chicago as Chicago Loop
Alabama State Fairgrounds as Corkscrew

603-893-3506
P.O. Box 190
85 N. Policy Street
Salem, NH 03079
http://www.canobie.com/
info@canobie.com
Coasters (4): Yankee Cannonball, Canobie Corkscrew, Dragon. Untamed
[catlist orderby=title order=ASC excludeposts=8 id=38]
This classic Schmeck out and back coaster is a wonderful ride. The park has maintained this ride impeccably, keeping it in tip top shape. The ride itself varies, as does any ride on a wooden coaster from year to year. The park realizes this and preserves it as well as any place can. This coaster exemplifies early relocation and preservation efforts, and is perhaps the first coaster to be relocated anywhere.
ACE New England salutes Canobie Lake Park and its maintenance crew for maintaining and preserving this historic treasure.
| Park | Canobie Lake Park |
| Opened | (1930-1935*) 1936 |
| Closed | |
| Designed by | Herbert Paul Schmeck |
| Built by | Frank F. Hoover (supervisor) |
| Type | Wood, Sit Down, L Shaped out and back |
| Length, Drop, Speed | 2000\’, 63\’ 6\”, 35 mph |
| Modifications | each section was shortened 6\” when it was moved |
| Other | 1954, Lift hill rebuilt because of Hurricane Carol |
* This coaster, Originally named \”Roller Coaster\” and operated at Lakewood Park, in Waterbury Connecticut for 5 years before being relocated to its current location. To this day, you can still see some of the original footers at Lakewood Park.