Lubbock’s Joyland

Lubbock’s Joyland (formerly known as Joyland Amusement Park) is an amusement park located in Lubbock, Texas, that is currently owned and operated by Carwardine Parks. It opened in 1948 as a small family owned traditional theme park owned by the Dean Family, but was put up for sale by the owners in late 2022. Carwardine bought the park and would reopen it in 2023 under a new name.

History
The park reopened in 2023 as “Lubbock’s Joyland”.

Roller coasters

 * Dragon Wagon (2017; A Wisdom Rides Dragon Wagon)
 * Garfield’s Pounce Coaster (Miler Manufacturing Oval Kiddie coaster, formerly known as “Little Coaster” (???-2008) and “Dipsy Doodle” [2009-2022])
 * Speedin' Bobcat (1990; An S.D.C. Galaxi, formerly known as "Galaxi" [1990-2022])
 * Super Mario's Super Coaster (2019; A Cavazza Diego Blizzard, formerly known as "Sand Storm" [2019-2022])

Flat rides

 * Bowser's Shell Game (2002; An SBF Visa Dizzy Dragons ride, formerly known as "Dizzy Dragons" [2002-2022])
 * Carousel (1960; C.W. Parker carousel)
 * Character Skyway (1979; A Hopkins Chairlift, formerly known as "Skyride" [1979-2022])
 * Diskusaurus Rex (2018; A KMG Freak Out, formerly known as "The X-Factor Extreme" [2018-2022])
 * Grizzly (2005; Wisdom Genesis)
 * Italian Automotive Jam (1982; A Pinfari Bumper Cars, formerly "Bumper Cars" [1982-2022])
 * Joyland Express (1979; A Crown Metal Products train ride, formerly "Train" [1979-2022])
 * Musik Express (1990; S.D.C. Musik Express)
 * Rock-50-Plane (1973; Eyerly Rock-O-Plane, formerly "Rock-O-Plane" [1973-2022])
 * Sandy’s Rocket (1988; Morgan swinging ship ride themed to a space shuttle, formerly known as “Space Shuttle” [1988-2022])
 * Scrambler 73 (1973; Eli Bridge Scrambler, formerly "Scrambler" [1973-2022])
 * Simpsons Drop (2009; 140-ft-tall Larson/ARM Rides Drop Tower, formerly known as “Dare Devil Drop” [2009-2022])
 * Spider (1980; Eyerly Spider)
 * Swindler (1983; Eyerly Roll-O-Plane, formerly "Roll-O-Plane" [1983-2022])
 * Tilt-A-Whirl (1988; A Sellner Tilt-A-Whirl)
 * Trabant (1968; Chance Trabant)

Kiddie rides

 * Jimmy Neutron’s Particle Accelerator (1982; Ramagosa kiddie Musik Express ride, formerly known as “Rock-It-Express” [1982-2022])
 * Flynn’s Fire Engines (2001; Visa International tracked car ride themed to fire trucks, formerly known as “Big Trucks” [2001-2022])

Water rides

 * SpongeBob’s SplashDown (Log Flume, manufacturer unknown, formerly known as “Wild River” [???-2022])

Lubbuck's Joywaters

 * American Dad: Triple Threat (2023; A ProSlide Tornado 18 with 3 funnels)
 * Dora's Water Adventure (2023; A zero-entry kiddie pool with ProSlide children's slides)
 * Fairly OddSlide (2023; A ProSlide RocketBlast with FlyingSaucer turns)
 * Family Guy 500 (2023; A ProSlide RallyRacer)
 * Fort Nick (2023; A ProSlide RideHouse)
 * Futurama: Bender's Bowl (2023; A ProSlide CannonBowl)
 * Invader Zim Splashdown (2023; A ProSlide SuperLoop)
 * King of the Hill: Propane Wave (2023; A ProSlide TornadoWave)
 * Skooter (1980s; a Bailey Rides AquaSkoot, formerly known as “Big Splash Speed Slide” [1980s-2022])
 * Turbo Falls (1990s; Hopkins Rides Inline Raft Slides, formerly known as “The Vortex” [1990s-2022])

Trivia

 * The park’s name was changed from “Joyland Amusement Park” to “Lubbock’s Joyland” to avoid confusion with Joyland Amusement Park, another Carwardine owned theme park in Wichita, Kansas.