Philly's Drive-In Theater Park

Philly's Drive-In Theater Park was a combination and  located in Bedminster, Pennsylvania. It was operated from 1977 to 1994. It was billed as "The world's first drive-in theater with an amusement park".

Early years
In the mid-1970s, a Philadelphia businessman named Andy Caddel had an idea behind Philly's Drive-In Theater Park after a visit to Dorney Park in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and Drive-In theater in the evening.

In the spring of 1977, the park/drive-in theater opened to the public.

When it opened it features three roller coasters:


 * The Drive-In Coaster, an Allan Herschell Little Dipper coaster is located around a drive-in movie screen,
 * The Drive-In Corkscrew, an Arrow Dynamics Corkscrew coaster, and
 * Mad Mouse, an Edwards & Robinson Large-Sized Wild Mouse coaster model.

In 1978, The Sonic Loop opened.

Later years and closure
At the start of the 1990s, the numbers of park visitors begin to decline.

in 1991, Kennywood opened Steel Phantom (an upgraded version of the Drive-In Corkscrew) that would draw visitors away from Philly's Drive-In Theater Park. and then the same year Hersheypark opened Sidewinder (an upgraded version of the Sonic Loop) that would also draw visitors away from the park. In 1992, The park attempted to get visitors to come back was adding more rides, reprinting, renaming some rides, replacing a new drive-in theater sign, and even adding an arcade building named Philly's Arcade, it was a success, but it didn't help save the theater and the park.

Finally, in late 1994, the entire amusement park shut down and the rides were sold. The theater continued to operate after that. But in late 1995, the theater closed for good. And the theater was left abandoned for a few years until it was demolished in early 1998.

Flat rides
TBA

Kiddie rides
TBA

Gallery
see Philly's Drive-In Theater Park/Gallery

Incidents
TBA

Trivia
TBA