O'Shiel's Country Club & Amusement Park

O'Shiel's Country Club & Amusement Park is an all-inclusive country club and amusement park in. It has been owned by the O'Shiel family since 1954.

History
In 1953, the 18-hole golf course was built. In 1954, it opened with the all-new country club.

In late 1993, the O'Shiel family announced that they were expanding the country club with an all-new amusement park. Construction lasted for little over a year, and on July 3rd, 1995, the amusement park opened to the public for the first time.

In 2016, Back 'n Forth opened.

Roller coasters

 * Back 'n Forth (2016; a Schwarzkopf Shuttle Loop, formerly "Greezed Lightnin'" at Kentucky Kingdom from 2003-2009, was refurbished with an all-new LIM launch from Gerstlauer when it opened at the park)
 * Dragon Wagon (1999; a Wisdom Rides Dragon Wagon Coaster)
 * New England Cannonball (1995; a CCI Wooden Coaster, layout inspired by the Comet at Great Escape)

Flat rides

 * Bumper Boats (1995; some bumper boats)
 * Flipster (2013; a Technical Park Loop Fighter ride)
 * Scrambler (1995; an Eli Scrambler ride)

Sports

 * 18-Hole Golf (course built in 1953 and opened with the country club in 1954)
 * Mini Golf (two courses, originally one 18-hole course was built but then another 9-hole course was added later on)
 * Rock Climb Wall (opened in 2003)

Monthly

 * CountryPass I ($300/month)
 * CountryPass II ($500/month)
 * CountryPass III ($700/month)
 * CountryPass IV ($2000/month)

Annually

 * Gold CountryPass I ($3,500/year)
 * Gold CountryPass II ($5,000/year)
 * Gold CountryPass III ($7,500/year)
 * Gold CountryPass IV ($20,000/year)

Trivia

 * While the amusement park portion is open to the public, the country club portion requires a membership for more than a 1-day visit, and tends to be more costly, hence why the CountryPass is available.
 * When New England Cannonball was first planned in late 1993, it originally had a layout inspired by Phoenix at Knoebels Amusement Resort. However, after the O'Shiel family attended Comet's opening day at Great Escape in June 1994, they loved the ride so much that they decided to switch gears and make the coaster's layout after Comet instead.
 * Because of this, construction went on later than expected, and the park's opening date was pushed back from Memorial Day 1995 to July 3rd, 1995, as the family still wanted the coaster to open with the park.