Memphisworld

Memphisworld is an amusement park located in Germantown, Tennessee. It is owned by Carwardine Parks.

History
The park began construction in 1984. Two years later, the park finished construction and it opened on July 4th, 1986.

In 1999, the park was purchased by Six Flags and renamed to Six Flags Over Memphis in 2000.

In 2006, Carwardine Parks purchased the park, The name was changed back to Memphisworld for the 2007 season.

Flat rides

 * Avalanche (2011; Chance Rides Thunderbolt, formerly operated at Six Flags America)
 * Barnstormer (1998; Bradley & Kaye Barnstormer, formerly operated at Opryland USA)
 * Carousel (1986; C.W. Parker Carousel, formerly operated at Calaway Park)
 * Chaos (2008; Chance Rides Chaos, formerly operated at Indiana Beach)
 * Earthquake (1986; HUSS Breakdance)
 * Floating Balloons (1986; Zamperla Balloon Race)
 * Hip-Hop (1987; Aero-Affiliates Flying Coaster, formerly operated at LeSourdsville Lake Amusement Park as Flying Coaster)
 * Log Jammer (1986; Hopkins Log Flume)
 * Looping Starship (1986; Intamin Looping Starship)
 * Lost Rapids (1986; Intamin River Rapids)
 * Memphis Freefall (1986; Intamin 1st Gen Freefall, formerly known as Superman: The Escape from 2000 to 2006)
 * Memphis Round-Up (1992; Schwarzkopf Bayern Kurve, formerly operated at Six Flags Great America as Yukon Yahoo)
 * Memphis Spiral (1986: Intamin Gyro Tower)
 * Paratrooper (1986; Hrubetz Lifting Paratrooper)
 * Wipeout (1997; Chance Rides Wipeout)

Kiddie rides

 * Frog Hopper (2007; S&S Worldwide Frog Hopper)
 * Memphis Jets (1986; Chance Rides Red Baron)

Roller Coasters

 * Comet Jr. (1988-1994; an NAD Junior Wooden Coaster, formerly operated at Nay Aug Park, replaced by Tornado Jr.)
 * Galaxi (1987-1988; an S.D.C. Galaxi coaster model, formerly operated at Crystal Beach, replaced by Wild Mouse)
 * Hurricane (2000-2006; an RCCA Wooden Coaster, replaced by Tornado, the ride's Premier trains were later reused for Memphis Thunderbolt)
 * Whirlwind (1986-1999; an Vekoma Whirlwind coaster model, relocated to Ghost Town In The Sky, replaced by Hurricane)
 * Wild Mouse (1989-1995; an B. A. Schiff Large sized hybrid Wild Mouse, formerly operated at North Webster's Adventureland, replaced with Zyklon)
 * Zyklon (1996-1999; an Pinfari Zyklon Z47 model, formerly operated at a traveling fair, replaced by Cannon Blaster)

Attractions

 * Vote Theater (1986-1993; an interactive movie theater that runs on Laserdisc and two buttons on theater seat armrests, replaced by The Black Hole)

Trivia

 * Both of the movies were filmed in 1984 for Laserdisc movie theater called Cine-Vote at Expo '85. After the fair ended, It was moved to Memphisworld for 1986 season.
 * The park contacted CCI to build Hurricane. For reasons still unknown years later, they ended up contacting RCCA (Roller Coaster Corporation of America) instead.
 * Memphis Comet took one year to relocate. In fact the ride was still under reconstruction when the park opened in 1986, so it opened about halfway through the season.
 * When Adventure City’s Tree Top Racers arrived at the park in late 2013, the cars had literally been lost (That said, there is a possibility some of them ended up at Lakeside). So they decided to build the cars from scratch, modeled like Schiff mouse cars.
 * Wildcat (formerly known as American Wildcat) was first coaster to constructed at the park.
 * When Playland's Corkscrew was sent to the park in 2020, the park initially wanted to rename it "Devil's Flight", as a reference/shout-out to Final Destination 3. However, a similar situation to Cedar Point's Banshee/Mantis controversy broke out and the ride was renamed to Vortex before opening.
 * This park is one of the few parks in the Carwardine Parks chain not to use a "Serpentine" family font, due to this Retro logo from 1986. Similar happen to Pizza Hut bringing back the 1974 logo in 2019.
 * While rebuilding Memphis Comet, One of NAD trains were seen in storage and later display at ride's queue line. They bought black and red PTC trains with buzz bars.
 * Headrests were added in 1995, but were removed once again in 2007.

Gallery
see Memphisworld/Gallery

Incidents

 * On September 8, 1995, one of the wheels of Wild Mouse cars came loose after huge drop. But luckily, no one was injured, but the ride itself was closed forever.