Santa's Village (Jefferson, New Hampshire)
Location | Jefferson, New Hampshire, USA |
---|---|
Coordinates | 44°25′35″N 71°29′45″W / 44.42639°N 71.49583°W |
Opened | 1953 |
Operating season | May through December |
Attractions | |
Total | 23 |
Roller coasters | 2 |
Water rides | 4 including HoHo H2O Water Park |
Website | Santa's Village |
Santa's Village is a Christmas-themed amusement park located in Jefferson, New Hampshire, United States.
Most of the 23 rides have Christmas or winter-themed names, such as "Rudy's Rapid Transit Coaster" and "The Great Humbug Adventure". The rides are designed for families with children under age 13. There are also three theatres, two of which present live shows and a third that features a 3-D movie called "A Tinkerdoodle Christmas". Visitors can visit Santa's home, sit in his rocking chair, and have a picture taken with Santa.
History and attractions
In the heart of the White Mountains at Jefferson, NH is Santa's Village. The quaint, rustic houses of the village are a colorful sight nestled among the mountain pines. As you walk up the shaded road from the parking lot you are by Santa's Monkey Band in the music house. Their cheery, syncopated greeting welcomes you to the Village.
Santa's Village was the brainchild of Normand and Cecile Dubois who, in the early 1950s, wanted to create something novel to their region.[2] Seeing deer crossing the road sparked Norman's belief that the North Country in New Hampshire would serve well as Santa and his reindeers' home.[3] On Father's Day, in 1953, the family amusement park was opened for the first time to the general public.[2] In its first year, the park had pony rides and showcased Francis the Famous Mule in a mule performance. The amusement park staff frequently gave her oats from a whiskey bottle to wheedle her to move. The Duboises also invited to the park Santa Claus who was accompanied by real reindeer and numerous elves. The park was later englarged to include a "Santa Schoolhouse", a "Blacksmith Shop", "Santa's Workshop" and a chapel.[4] In 1955, the park was open from June to October.[5]
By 1969, the park also had playgrounds, restaurants, and a "Jingle Jamboree". The Dubois family added a dancing chicken and rabbit performance to the park's activities.[4] By 1974, the Dubois' son-in-law, Michael Gaynor, took over the park's management after the couple retired. The admission for people over four years old in 1974 was $3.[3] Peggy Newland of the The Nashua Telegraph wrote in 2010 that "[b]y the 1980s, the park had grown to a 'real' amusement park".[4] The park was further expanded, with a "Yule Log Flume" that glided down a Christmas-themed river, carrying people around the park. Macaws performed in the park, roller-skating around the stage and balancing bikes on a tightrope.[4]
In 1986, Jack Barth of Spy wrote that Santa's Village has a "strange arrangement", in that to take pictures, people poke their heads out of a cake made of plaster.[6] The grandchildren of Normand and Cecile Dubois manage the park. They added a "Polar Theater" with 3D shows that include elves that dance and a tree that sings, as well as "Skyways Sleighs", which transport people through the sky to different parts of the park.[4]
Near the park's duck pond is a life-size Nativity scene. The park also has a wishing well, where children can make a wish and toss coins in. The money from the wishing well is given to marginalized children through the form of Christmas gifts.[1] In the first year of the Village, more than $1000 from the well was used to buy gifts for marginalized children.[7]
Admission for the 2015 season is US$30 per person, $28 for seniors over 62 but children 4 and under are free.
Mick Foley wrote in his autobiography The Hardcore Diaries that he has a Christmas fixation and that "every good thing in my life somehow leads me back to Jefferson, New Hampshire, and the trip to Santa's Village my parents took me on when I was only three years old".[8] In his list of top ten amusement parks, Foley placed Santa's Village first, writing that "[w]hat it lacks in rides, it makes up for in personal nostalgia, a beautiful location, and the magic of Christmas in the summer".[9]
References
- ^ a b Orcutt, Georgia; Margolies, John (2008). The All-American Christmas Cookbook: Family Favorites from Every State. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. p. 78. ISBN 0-8118-6144-9. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ^ a b Butko, Brian; Butko, Sarah (2007). Roadside Attractions: Cool Cafés, Souvenir Stands, Route 66 Relics, & Other Road Trip Fun. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. pp. 59–60. ISBN 0-8117-0229-4. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ^ a b Tree, Christina (1976-09-12). "White Mountains: Attractions that Lure". The Boston Globe.
- ^ a b c d e Newland, Peggy (2010-12-12). "Wonders of the season abound at Santa's Village in Jefferson". The Nashua Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2011-03-16. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ^ Sidoti, Santa (1955-06-05). "In Santa's Village, It's Christmas Now". The Boston Globe.
- ^ Barth, Jack (December 1986). "Santaland x 3 = Fun". Spy. Sussex Publishers: 18. ISSN 0890-1759. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ^ Johnson, Frances Ann (1956-06-10). "Santa's Village Has All the Fixings". The Boston Globe.
- ^ Foley, Mick (2008). The Hardcore Diaries. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 28. ISBN 1-4165-5678-8. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ^ Foley, Mick (2002). Foley Is Good: And the Real World Is Faker Than Wrestling. HarperCollins. p. 191. ISBN 0-06-103241-7. Retrieved 2011-03-16.