Six Flags Over Maryland

Six Flags Over Maryland is an amusement park located in Annapolis, Maryland (a suburb in Baltimore). It is owned and operated by Six Flags. It was established on May 28, 1963 by Westinghouse as Baltimore's Great Acres. Westinghouse would promptly sell the park to Smith Family Amusement Parks (later Sinclair Theme Parks) in 1983. Sinclair would then merge with Premier Parks in 1995, and it would gain its current name in 1998.

Due to the theme park being 10 miles away from Bowie based Six Flags America, the park is commonly dubbed a "sister park".

Westinghouse era (1963-1982)
Due to rise of Westinghouse and their stations, Westinghouse conceived plans of expanding further by entering the theme park business. They decided to build a new park in Annapolis (a suburb in Baltimore) mainly because WJZ with served that area was one of Westinghouse's best performing ABC affiliate. Development of the park began as early as 1961 and finished in March 1963. The theme park was officially opened on May 28, 1963 as Baltimore's Great Acres. The new theme park was divided into 5 areas, "Greater Baltimore", "Splash Station", "WJZ 13 National Park", "The Kids Corner", and "Classical Maryland". During its first year of operation, it mostly was closer to an entertainment center than a theme park. In 1964, three new attractions were added, a flat ride named "Nature Traveller" in WJZ 13 National Park, a train ride known as the "Westinghouse Express" located at The Kids Corner, and the first roller coaster in the park, "Victory Smasher", which was located at Classical Maryland.

1967 was the first year were the park gained major changes. The Kids Corner was renamed "Westinghouse Funtown" and the park added 6 new attractions. "The Voyage", an Arrow Dynamics log flume ride, was built at the Splash Station section of the park, "Soaring Skies" and "Deer Plains" were two roller coasters built for the WJZ 13 National Park area, the first wooden roller coaster in the park, "Taney" was located at the Greater Baltimore area, and a haunted house/minecart themed ride known as "Ghost Trap" was located in the newly named Westinghouse Funtown section of the park.

1972 would see the creation of Chesapeake, a rollercoaster known for its large heights and fast speeds. It was located at the WJZ 13 National Park area and became the main attraction at the park for many years. In 1976, two new attractions were added, Timber, an aerial ride and Driver, a new roller coaster. Both were built for the WJZ 13 National Park era with the latter replacing the former Deer Plains ride.

Sinclair Theme Parks era (1983-1995)
In 1983, Westinghouse sold the park to up-and-coming theme park chain Sinclair Theme Parks (then named Smith Family Amusement Parks). It would be the very first park that the company would acquire, and the first park in the chain period. Because of this, Westinghouse Funtown was converted back to The Kids Corner, and WJZ 13 National Park became known as Maryland National Park.

In 1985, Victory Smasher, the park's first coaster, was removed following the end of the season and sold off to a traveling fair. It's current fate is unknown. The spot that the ride was sitting on would be used as an expansion of the Classical Maryland area for 1986.

During the 1993 season, Sinclair Theme Parks announced its expansion of the The Kids Corner section of the park. The Sinclair 45 train ride (which previously went under the Westinghouse Express name) was replaced by a new train ride named the Kids Corner Railroad. The park also opened a carousel ride known as the "Cor-A-Round", a small ferris wheel known as "The Looper", and a music express ride known as "Himalaya". This expansion also included the construction of a sound studio used for the production of the Fox 45 Kids Club program on WBFF-TV (which Sinclair owned).

Premier Parks era (1995-1998)
In 1995, Sinclair Theme Parks merged with Premier Parks, causing it's parks as a result to become Premier Parks properties.

In 1998, Boomerang: Coast to Coaster opened.

Six Flags era (1999-present)
In 1999, the park was renamed to Six Flags Over Maryland as a result of Six Flags rebranding the Premier Parks properties.

In 2003, Superman: The Escape opened.

In 2004, Hurricane Harbor opened, replacing the Splash Station area of the park.

Areas

 * Classic Maryland
 * DC Universe (formerly known as Gotham City from 1999-2010)
 * Greater Baltimore
 * Kidzopolis (formerly known as Wiggles World from 2008-2010)
 * Looney Tunes Movie Town (formerly known as Westinghouse Funtown from 1967-1982 and The Kids Corner from 1963-1966 and 1983-1998)
 * Six Flags National Park (formerly known as WJZ 13 National Park from 1963-1982 and Maryland National Park from 1983-2013)

Roller coasters

 * Boomerang: Coast to Coaster (1998; A Vekoma Boomerang coaster) [Greater Baltimore]
 * The Riddler's Revenge (2006; A Maurer SkyLoop XT 450) [DC Universe]
 * Roaring Timbers (2000; A CCI Wooden Coaster) [Six Flags National Park]
 * Superman: The Escape (2003; An Intamin "Mini-Strata" that would serve as the prototype for Stealth and Zaturn) [DC Universe]
 * Taney (1968; A PTC Wooden Coaster) [Greater Baltimore]

Flat rides

 * Batman vs. The Joker (2001; A Zamperla Hawk 48 ride) [DC Universe]

Kiddie rides

 * Movie Town Studio Tour (1993; A Zamperla Rio Grande kiddie train ride, formerly known as Kids Corner Railroad [1993-1998]) [Looney Tunes Movie Town]
 * Taz Tornado (1999; A Zamperla Loli Swing ride)

Roller coasters

 * Victory Smasher (1964-1985; A Schwarzkopf Wildcat 54m, sold off to a traveling fair, fate currently unknown)

Flat Rides

 * The Voyage (1967-2003; An Arrow Dynamics log flume ride, demolished to make way for Hurricane Harbor, trains were sent to other Six Flags parks for their log flume rides, except for one which is currently being used as a photo op spot in Hurricane Harbor)

Trivia

 * This park is said to compliment Six Flags America rather than compete.