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Closed Zoos

Discussion in 'Zoo History' started by Meaghan Edwards, 23 Jul 2008.

  1. Meaghan Edwards

    Meaghan Edwards Well-Known Member

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    Wow, that is a huge list!

    I've come upon some more:

    House of David Eden Springs Zoo in Michigan.
    Faircloth Zoo in Bolivia, North Carolina.
    [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_Metro_Zoo"]Triangle Metro Zoo[/ame], North of Raleigh, North Carolina.
     
  2. John Dineley

    John Dineley Well-Known Member

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    Visited it a few years before it closed. It was taken over by Entam - the leisure division of Trust House Forte. They closed it a few years later and I remember staff getting t-shirts made with the logo "Never Trust House Forte" on them. It was a large collection of some note.

    It's a good example of what happens when commercial entertainment companies take over animal attractions. Etam also ran several dolphinariums at Knowsley and Woburn safari parks and at the fun fair sites at Portcawl and Rhyl in Wales. I am attempting to getting some photos and info up on this on my UK Dolpharia site. There are a couple of pictures of Knowsley on there at the moment.
     
  3. John Dineley

    John Dineley Well-Known Member

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    They also wanted the two killer whales ;) 'Corky ' the female is still alive and at San Diego Sea World.

    It's a shame because I visited it a couple of years before it closed and it was nicely run and the animal displays where not too OTT and educational. The staff there were some of the first to train 'husbandry training' e.g. voluntary blood testing behaviours etc. This has become almost common place in many zoos and aquaria and across many species not just marine mammals.
     
  4. John Dineley

    John Dineley Well-Known Member

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    Many of then only existed for a couple of years and a number were basically rather crude in construction. Only a few where actually purpose built with any view to for long-term commitment to do anything 'zoological', this being a low priorly.

    Remember there was no Zoo Licensing Act which did not come into force until 1984 and also until 1972 the US Government allowed permits to capture and export of dolphins from Florida with out any preconditions as regards welfare standards of the counties they went too.

    Regulations
     
  5. European Fauna

    European Fauna Well-Known Member

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    This is a fascinating point.It is similar to a debate that is very common among restorers and collectors of classic cars.If you take a classic car in terrible condition and begin replacing damaged components one-by-one, at what moment is it not the original car? Is retaining the original chassis nº sufficient? Is there some kind of spirit of identity in a zoo that ensures continuity even after a change of location? Can the traditions and lore of one zoo be transferred intact to a new location? Of course,zoos are never static and are always evolving, so that even in the case of a zoo with a very long history and no change of location, very little of the original fabric may survive today, but of course nobody questions the continuity.What do zoochatters think?
     
  6. Meaghan Edwards

    Meaghan Edwards Well-Known Member

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    Fairyland Zoo in Black Hills, South Dakota, is another closed (?) zoo. I can't find much on it at all, aside from the postcards I have uploaded of the place.

    http://www.zoochat.com/728/silas-webfoot-114720/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/romeo-114718/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/buck-bunny-114713/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/grubstake-charlie-114712/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/curley-hare-114711/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/casey-114710/
    http://www.zoochat.com/728/beak-maverick-114709/

    I.Q Zoo is another closed zoo in the US, specifically Hot Springs, Arkansas. Unlike Fairyland Zoo, I've been able to dig up quite a bit of info about the place and the people who were behind it.

    IQ Zoo - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
    http://www.zoochat.com/602/rufus-raccoon-114730/
    Monitor on Psychology - The IQ Zoo
    Science: I.Q. Zoo - TIME
    http://www.google.ca/url?sa=t&sourc...943zCQ&usg=AFQjCNE9D-UxMUGDh7mh-t26Ndpj3CYd6w
    [ame=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marian_Breland_Bailey]Marian Breland Bailey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
     
  7. elefante

    elefante Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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    I remember Discovery Island! It was nothing like the advertised it. The guidebooks made it look like everything roamed free. Some birds like flamingos, peafowl, and waterfowl did roam free, but most animals were in cages. They were not too small but I remember being disappointed. I had almost forgotten about that!
     
  8. elefante

    elefante Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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    Meaghan, do you remember Aqualand (I think that was the name) in the Black Hills? It was a seal show and I think they had dolphins as well.
     
  9. Talli

    Talli Well-Known Member

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    The aquarium in the Black Hills, which had a couple of dolphins (I think they moved them south in the winter) was called Marine Life. I read that it closed in the 1990's and the dolphins were sent to China! Reptile Gardens and Bear Country USA are still open.
     
  10. Shirokuma

    Shirokuma Well-Known Member

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    I went to Southport Zoo a few times when I was a kid, for a small zoo it was packed with animals, not all in bad enclosures although I remember writing a letter of complaint (I was about 10 years old) about the bear cage.

    Another closed zoo in the North West of England is Haigh Hall Zoo. It was situated in a country park near Wigan and had a large number of animals including many birds, primates and small cats. Larger animals included zebras, bactrian camels, llamas and Brazilian tapir.
    It closed in the early 1990s I think.
     
  11. elefante

    elefante Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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    Talli, where did you read about this?
     
  12. Talli

    Talli Well-Known Member

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  13. Blackduiker

    Blackduiker Well-Known Member

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    Remnants of the old Griffith Park Zoo in Los Angeles, that closed in 1965, are just a small fraction of exhibits once found there. And those old antiquated structures only remain in part. That was the zoo of my early childhood until the current Los Angeles Zoo opened in 1966.

    Other facilities now closed, once a part of greater Los Angeles include Lion Country Safari, Japanese Deer Park, Buena Park Alligator Farm, Busch Gardens, and Marineland of the Pacific. I had the privilege of visiting all but Busch Gardens.
     
  14. Meaghan Edwards

    Meaghan Edwards Well-Known Member

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    Urban exploration shots of Marineland of the Pacific:

    Urban Exploration Resource: Display Location: Marineland of the Pacific

    I don't believe this was posted, the Nay Aug Park Zoo/Genesis Wildlife Center in Scranton, PA.

    Abandoned Zoo–Nay Aug Park Cheri Sundra's Blog
    ShowMe Elephants: Nay Aug Park Zoo, Scranton, Pennyslvania

    Abandoned aquarium in Qatur:

    Qatar Guest: A slightly surreal trip to the Qatar National Museum

    It seems a skiinig resort in Big Pines, CA had a zoo:

    Kirsten Anderberg's CA History Site: Big Pines Ski Club/Lodge & Big Pines, CA.

    Home movie of Crandon Zoo in Miami on the 1:52 mark:



    Dierenpark Tilburg (Denmark)

    [ame]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dierenpark_Tilburg[/ame]

    Lai Chi Kok Zoo (Hong Kong)

    [ame]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lai_Chi_Kok_Zoo[/ame]

    Upper Clements Wildlife Park (Nova Scotia)

    [ame]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Clements_Park[/ame]

    Knaresborough Zoo (North Yorkshire)

    http://sites.google.com/site/nicknyoka/
    http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/features/history/8254529.Memories_of_Knaresborough_Zoo/
    http://circusnospin.blogspot.com/2011/03/noyka-and-simba.html
     
    Last edited by a moderator: 6 Jul 2017
  15. Talli

    Talli Well-Known Member

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    There's an interesting webpage for Marineland of the Pacific showing some history, some memorabilia, etc.
    Marineland of the Pacific
     
  16. Gary

    Gary Well-Known Member

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    Southampton Zoo in the UK-basically a holding pen for animals owned by the Chipperfield Circus empire that was open to the public.

    Very cramped conditions on a mainly concreted site just outside the town centre-closed its doors during the 1980s.

    It was pretty much driven out of business by the opening of the much larger Marwell a few miles away, the changing attitudes to the older style of 'postage stamp' collections, and the very anti-zoo sentiments of the local Loony Left City Council.

    The site is now a wildlife study site on Southampton Common but I've never been-I think it was mostly aimed at school parties and I was a bit too old by that time!
     
  17. Panthera Puss

    Panthera Puss Well-Known Member

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    My veterinarian girlfriend remembers the old Basildon Zoo (without much affection) - she took a thorn out of a lion's paw there around 1989. She didn't give an anaesthetic - the lion had his paw against the wire and was too old to move much, so Androcles-like she whipped it out there and then.
     
  18. TARZAN

    TARZAN Well-Known Member

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    Without doubt the worst zoo I have ever visited was at Seaburn near Sunderland in the seventies. This dreadful establishment consisted of very small enclosures, a brown bear incarcerated in a cage which today would be deemed unsuitable for a raccoon, lions and tigers enclosed in various structures all of which were sub standard, the center piece being a duck pond which consisted of dirty green water with stale bread floating in it, a great zoo if you liked looking at rats and sheep's heads , I think this zoo thankfully closed its doors at the end of 1979, I remember seeing posters on the sea front of Seaburn during its final year advertising Maggie the monkey who had been born on election day of that year, fortunately there were no U turns and this "zoo" never reopened after its closure, the premises were demolished.
     
  19. Talli

    Talli Well-Known Member

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    Did anybody mention that the Navajo Nation Zoo in Window Rock, Arizona is NOT closed? Don't know if it closed at one time, but it's open now. I had hoped to go to in on the way home home from New Mexico a few weeks ago, but ended up at Wildlife West near Albuquerque instead. I was there some years ago.
    I believe the Sahati Camel farm is also still open - I went by it, I think early 2010, but unfortunately it was closed for the day.
     
  20. joobee

    joobee Member 10+ year member

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    Gosh.....Ive NEVER heard of a zoo at St Asaph before reading this thread! (excuse me joining in so late!!) My sister lives very near what is now the Tweedmil shopping outlet....its certainly not common knowledge there was ever a zoo there! the best i could find locally is possibly a travelling collection used to use the site as its base in the winter. I'd love to hear more about this!