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A forever-missed attraction from San Antonio’s past, Playland Park was a staple in the city and took pride in being the first amusement park in Texas.
Playland Park remains a fond memory for many longtime San Antonio residents. UTSA Special Collections Jimmy Johnson, the builder and owner of Playland Park, is seen in this undated file photo.
His family took the carousel back to San Antonio, where it sat in storage on the Playland Park property until it was put up for auction in 1988. As Gaida tells it, each horse was sold individually.
Named for the long-gone Playland Park, Playland is a stylish funhouse of food and revelry by restaurateurs Andrew Goodman and Stefan Bowers, a quirky pizzeria with a puro San Antonio back story ...
San Antonio has earned a reputation for its dearth of parks and other green space. Monticello Park near Jefferson High School is little more than an oversized median with a water fountain.
Adopting new guidelines to manage public-private partnerships and hiring a consultant likely will slow an Alamo Colleges effort to develop a new administrative headquarters and mixed-use complex ...
It was 1945. Once a year in those days, on June 19 — Juneteenth — Playland Park in San Antonio was opened to Negroes. It was a pay for admission park with a Ferris Wheel and many other rides ...
One was Ed Gaida, remembered here Sept. 7, an authority on street features and Playland Park. The other was Patsy Pittman Light (1931-2024), whom we lost Nov. 30. As author of two books on the art ...