The Disneyland Book of Secrets 2014: One Local's Unauthorized, Rapturous and Indispensable Guide to the Happiest Places on Earth

The Disneyland Book of Secrets 2014: One Local's Unauthorized, Rapturous and Indispensable Guide to the Happiest Places on Earth Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Disneyland Book of Secrets 2014: One Local's Unauthorized, Rapturous and Indispensable Guide to the Happiest Places on Earth Read Online Free PDF
Author: Leslie Le Mon
swarmed California’s deserts—especially the Mojave —to design and test their flying creations.
    By the late 1940’s, after World War II, Southern California was bustling with energy and industry.  Automobile and aerospace plants that had helped win the war continued to produce transporation for peacetime use, as California’s car culture exploded and air passenger travel became so standard that it was almost ho-hum.
    Comfortable middle-class suburbs spread out from city centers like Los Angeles and San Diego.  Everything seemed to be booming.  Everyone seemed to have money to burn, and they wanted places to burn it—especially as families.
    It’s not an exaggeration to say that at one time or another, a visitor to Southern California could probably find any type of amusement their heart might desire and their imagination could conjur.  Becasue So Cal has always attracted tourists as well as dreamers, and tourists dream of relaxing and being entertained.
    Visitors to California could drive through a redwood tree, discover the old world in Solvang, tour a Hollywood movie studio, visit a valley citrus grove, ride an ostrich in Pasadena, and glide along Abbot Kinney’s Venetian canals.  A tourist could do anything in So Cal, because it seemed that anything one dreamed of doing, someone else in So Cal had done first—not only done, but created a place for others to experience it too.
    Dreamers kept building their dreams in Southern California.  Over the years they have taken on many forms.  What seems to one person like a ludicrous obsession might seem to another to be peerless entertainment.  You never knew what someone might build next door.  It might be a lion preserve, a whole safari land, or a reproduction of an old western town.  It might be an alligator farm, or a seaside amusement park.
    By the late 1940’s, as the California suburbs expanded, and more and more Californians were out and about in their cars, and more and more tourists were coming to the Golden state, Walt Disney began dreaming a very special, very complicated, and very expensive dream—a dream that combined many dreams, if you will.
    And the genius folks at the Stanford Research Institute told Walt just where to build his dream:  Thirty miles south of Los Angeles, in Orange County , in a quilt of orange and walnut groves and strawberry fields.  Though Anaheim was still very small, and very sleepy, it was about to become the population center of California, smack-dab near a convergence of freeway interchanges that would make it exceptionally convenient for locals and tourists in those restlessly prowling cars.
    Anaheim itself had been something of a dream, the utopian fantasy of Bavarian vintners and grape growers who settled Anaheim in the late 1850’s.  When the grapes were annihilated by insects thirty years later, the resilient residents regrouped and began growing citrus fruits and nuts.  Anaheim ’s bucolic beauty attracted dreamers like the brilliant actress Helena Modjeska; in the late 1800’s she settled in Anaheim and built her own dream-like residential compound, Arden, in what is now Modjeska Canyon.
    Orange County has been the site of vast cattle ranches, vast citrus groves, and vast oil fields, of Modjeska’s Arden, and Reverend Schuller’s Crystal Cathedral, of Friedrich Conrad’s interpretation of Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens, of seaside Fun and Joy Zones, of Knott’s Berry Farm among many, many, many other eclectic attractions large and small.
    So when Walt Disney built his dream—some would say it’s still among the greatest dreams ever conceived and realized—he built it in a territory already well known for its utopias and fantasies.
     
    * * *
     
    Today’s Anaheim and Orange County have negative reputations in some quarters.
    Beyond tourist attractions like Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm , the OC is often portrayed as an enclave of conservative elitists with a great deal of wealth and very
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