Orlando area attractions through the years: A tourism timeline
Becoming a tourism mecca was years in the making. It started with nature-driven attractions and was jump-started by Walt Disney. Along the way have been alligators, mermaids, Mickey Mouse, Elvis, dinner theaters, Dolly Parton, the Holy Land and assorted entrepreneurs. Here are some industry highlights from the past 150 years.
• 1878: Silver Springs (and its glass-bottom boats) becomes the first commercial tourist attraction in Florida.
• 1910: Joyland, featuring swimming, waterslides, a dance hall, dock-and-picnic area, opens on Lake Ivanhoe in what would become the College Park neighborhood of Orlando.
• 1920s: A network of roads known as Dixie Highway connects Orlando and other Florida towns with northern cities.
• 1920: Hand Tourist Camp welcomes snowbirds and other visitors on 20 acres between Central and East South streets in downtown Orlando.
• 1923: Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens opens. It moved to its current location in Sanford in July 1975.
• April 1923: Orlando’s Tinker Field is dedicated. It played host to minor-league baseball for decades. In 1964, Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech from the pitcher’s mound.