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The Pike was an amusement zone in Long Beach, California. The Pike was founded in along the shoreline south of Ocean Boulevard with several independent arcades , food stands, gift shops, a variety of rides and a grand bath house. It was most noted for the Cyclone Racer โ , a large wooden dual-track roller coaster , built out on pilings over the water. The Pike operated under several names. The amusement zone surrounding the Pike, Silver Spray Pier, was included along with additional parking in the post- World War II expansion; it was all renamed Nu-Pike via a contest winner's submission in the late s, then renamed Queen's Park in the late s in homage to the arrival of the Queen Mary ocean liner in Long Beach.
The first major attraction to the seashore at Long Beach was recreational bathing, long before trains and cars, when the only roads were dusty rutted paths littered with horse manure.
Residents of Southern California escaped the summer heat by crowding the shore and beaches to enjoy the cool ocean breeze and the Pacific Ocean chilled by the Aleutian current. With the surge of health-conscious new residents and the ease of access to a beach near the services of local merchants, Willmore City became a destination. The amusement zone began in , as a beach and grand bath house resort at the Long Beach terminus of the Red Car interurban commuter electric railroad system Pacific Electric Railway southern expansion from Los Angeles.
A grand bath house was constructed at the shore, scheduled to open Independence Day, The grand opening of the bath house, known later as The Plunge, coincided with the inaugural run of the Pacific Electric Railway Long Beach Line on the morning of July 4, โ which established service connecting communities along the line to offices and shopping in downtown Los Angeles as well as bringing bathers and families south to Pacific Ocean shoreline recreation.
Sheltered at the mouth of the Los Angeles River, the public pier served a range of purposes, primarily for trade and commerce, servicing freight and passenger shipping, but also served anglers fishing as well as pedestrian strolling. A simple wooden boardwalk was laid directly at the top of the sand west along the shoreline connecting the pier to the new bathhouse.